



ill^ 












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STATEM E N T. 



DYNAMICS OF ORGANISM AND PHYSICS. 



A dynamic of physiology, physics and sociology, true to 
nature, and real to knowledge. Resultantly , a corrective of 
much notion and do of sort, by a method of truth and right 
analytically true to facts. 



DYNAMICS OF ORGANISM AND PHYSICS. 



FIRST EDITION 






Q) , 



S. B. TERRY & CO. 

Kansas City, Kans. 

Rosedale Station, U. S. A. 

1908. 






LIBRARY of GONGfiESS 
Two Owes Recoivoc 

JAN 6 1908 
Copynem tntry 

CLAS&4 XXc. No. 

/Cftf IbL. 

COPY 8, 



Copyright 1907 

by 

Stewart B. Terry 



ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 



Dynamics 



DYNAMICS here, an ever VARYING ACTIVITY AND 
PASSIVITY of organic or inorganic structure causing or effect 
apart or whatever way combined in thing — THING, an any ac- 
tive or passive or active and passive structure, function or pro- 
duct apart or whatever way combined in name and fact. 

DYNAMICS ORGANIC then, an any massive molecular 
and atomic activity or passivity or activity and passivity of sort 
to that an any direct or indirect or direct and indirect appropria- 
tion, elimination, grow, gather, make, mend, develop, transfer 
or conserve of thing in an any VARYING economy and in- 
ecomony, efficiency and inefficiency, essentiality and inessentiality 
and equity and inequity of effort, to that VARYINGLY, BENE- 
FICIAL, USELESS OR HARMFUL TO LIFE. [33, 41, 1, 3, 18, 
19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 27, 16, **, 11 a. n. n.] 

Errata and Notice 



Page 


Par. 


Line 


For 


Read 


12 


1 


2 


"parts" 


past 


21 


D 


2 


"construction" 


contradiction 


31 


1 


23 


"defined" 


defered 


26 


2 


22 


"to" 


do 


44 


2 


5 


"causatius" 


causation 


34 


1 


9 


"chances" 


changes 


49 


1 


1 


' 'monumentalism' ' 


monometalism 


56 


2 


13 


"shown" 


shorn 


56 


1 


15 


"possible" 


positive 


61 


2 


12 


"benefication" 


verification 


64 


3 


1 


"recognition" 


recognitive 


65 


3 


7 


"means" 


is 


65 


3 


8 


"is" 


it 


67 


2 


11 


"fine" 


five 


73 


4 


22 


"concretely" 


concertly 


90 


3 


7 


"are" 


art 


103 


1 


8 


"ranced" 


transcend 


119 


3 


9 


"motion" 


motors 


158 


2 


32 


"caring" 


earning 


158 


2 


6 


"shown" 


shorn 


167 


1 


4 


"quality" 


quantity 


209 


7 


1 


"apprehensive" 


apprehension 


183 


2 


5 


"humanity" 


humanly 


184 


4 


3 


"moran" 


moral 


215 


2 







Appendix F 


216 


1 


6 


"few" 


Jew 



216 2 25 "exploment" employment 

217 3 Appendix G 
34 2 6: — insert after "different" the caps here, OR 

RESEMBLING AS LIKENESS, DIF- 
FERENCE 
40 2 18: — insert end of line the caps here, ERAL 

THEIR RECOGNITIONS OR IMPULSES 
OF THING SELECT, OBVIATE OR 
[Erase line 20] 

Carefully mark these errors before reading — a necessity. 
Other errors here, are mostly letters. The author's only com- 
ment for this imperfect print, is that it is such or may be none 
for him ever to submit to public attention — here a discovery* of 
dynamic principles in nature and knowledge so in accord with 
facts as to be easily comprehended by persons of studious intelli- 
gence. [A result of forty years study.] 



N£ 



PRELIMINARY. 

"Conceit of knowledge without a reality, was by Socrates 
perpetually stigmatized as the most disgraceful of mental de- 
fects; and the whole effort of his terrible questioning * * * 
was to make men aware of this conceit" * * * "Instead of 
the loose heterogeneous conceptions, with which men deceived 
themselves into a belief of knowledge-, he insisted on the sub- 
stitution of rigorous and distinct conceptions: — how could this 
be done but by definitions — by denning it you demark it from 
what it is not, and so present the thing before you in its es- 
sence, & It was a fundamental conception with him that it is 
impossible to start from one true thought, and become entan- 
gled in an any contradiction with another true thought." [7*] 
[Lewes Biographical History of Philosophy] 

Aside from definition and primary to it,- we have knowl- 
edge classificatory identitive or discriminative of things or at- 
tribute in a some kind or amount of thing form quality quan- 
tity place or time individual or collective. Definition of these 
primary apprehensions, a verbal separation or compound of 
the any all parts of thing or attribute in a some predicate of 
sort, or a some designation of them same in a some same or 
other word or words a whole or circumscribed portion. 



OBJECTIVES FUNDAMENTAL TO NATURE AND 
KNOWLEDGE. 

[Read slow, very slow] 

Sec. 1 Thing is an any distinguished structure causing 
effect or doing of sort whole or part an any collection mass 
molecule or atom [19, 20]. 

m Structure, passive when acted on by a some precedent 
or connected cause of sort, causative when producing a some 
change pause or fixity of something passively connected or dis- 
connected in time, and both when conjoined in two distinct func- 
tions causative and passive or passive and causative — (See stress 
strain and impact here to the passive and causative (20 m), 
and causative other when passively under locomotion swim fly 
crawl or carry) : causing, an any massive molecular or atomic 
exercise of motor tendent motor or resistent force in causative 
structure to any effect of sort conjunctive, and effect, their any 
individual or concert results of change pause or fixity of struc- 
ture organic inorganic or both. Thing here, a relative all of 
that factoraly a concert of lesser things within a whole or part 
involved &&. Concert, a concompitant or sequent union or both 
of two or more factoral things as causes or effects or both belong- 
ing to a whole or part involved *@ — concert maintain of 
structure, a binding force preservative of the structure elemen- 
tary and massive. Of name and fact to thing, see varying defi- 
niteness and indefiniteness of word a correspondence with our 
circumscribing comprehensions of the facts in themselves. For 
conjunctions of the organic and physical in thing-, see concert 
of vegetation with the inorganic of growth, and concert of higher 
life with machinery or implement and animal and vegetable life. 



*@ Of concert in language to comprehension sort-, see 
letters a concert to syllables, syllables a concert to words, words 
a concert to name (12), names a concert to propositions (61), 
and propositions a concert so far as factors to a some compre- 
hension wholly or partly true or false the facts. [For devices 
to concert in speech-, see conjunctive words special (15 c m) 
and modifying connection other descriptive (13) compound or 

&, && x, zz denote referencial beginnings within the para- 
graph and sec' to the characters conjoined with them in paren- 
thetic reference other where. Other references within the text 
without parenthesis, refer to a paragraph or note near at hand, 
or immediately below. 

2 



alternative; verbal concerts, ever of subject and predicate prop- 
ositional, and pronouns or references pointing back or forward 
to expressions there concert to what more and then takes place 
in comprehension @@. For propositions corresponding to facts-, 
see most declarations dictations advices etc about things of 
everyday experience, or verifiable inference: and for discon- 
certs of proposition to facts-, see most declarations dictations 
advices etc about subjects resting solely or mostly on whim or 
say-so,- casual or current of the day — note here to this cures 
of disease attributed to thousands of injurious or useless pre- 
scriptions lay and professional — (11d **) ; state and national 
welfare (ills really) attributed to partisan causes ilk of sort, 
and a confusing myriad of other notions (11 B n) in sort erron- 
eous false absurd plausable or unverifiable in fact. Predicative 
concerts of symbol verbally whole of a subject, are definitive 
words equivolently same; and concerts portional a subject, are 
descriptive words equivolently part — (14, 13, 12) : — note of 
concert here-, that it is words themselves that are in concert to 
apprehension,- and not the concerts to causes or effects outside 
of this in nature, and subject to sensation per object and mem- 
ory recognitive and discriminative — memory and object, are the 
concerts here to sensation,- and not words — words, a promptu 
of objects learned and associated with such in experiences gen- 
eral (11 x) of sensation and name. 

x All things in sort possess Attributes of sort inseverable 
of them other than mental obstraction, and known as form 
quality quantity place and time. By force a quite hidden or 
transcendental thing in functional do-, it follows that our cog- 
nizance of such (feelingly represented of sense to pressure pull 
or push) , is ever of the effects themselves and the force itself 
inferred of magnetism or gravity, or atrributed to the any 
antecedents of stress strain or impact simple or consecutive. 
Structure, a passive so long as acted on, and coordinate when 
coordinated to a causing of something connected. Product the 
something to a causing, is structure changed in form quality 
(25) severance compound or place, or the any holding preserva- 
tive or placing of it in gravity magnetism constriction or isomer- 
ism:- movement in gravity by other cause, has a resisting or 
assisting other product conjoined in gravity as a retarding pull 
of the coherence of a product toward its center in antagonism, 
or accelerating or replacing of it in cooperation; a holding of a 
structure simple or compound in gravity (air and water in- 
cluded), is per gravity and a resisting structure of that under- 
neath it, and that a lateral hold or attract of it globular. All 
nature then is a prior coherence of matter and force, and a caus- 
ing and effect change or hold anew of it; confinement, all occu- 
pied distance and direction infinity past and infinity to be. Co- 
herence here coordinate and the forces, are cause: While activ- 
ity of the force to an effect, constitute a functional thing — 
coordinate an active or passive coherence to cause (external or 
internal) , and coherence passive, the same or other a nucleus of 
the product — the nucleus a passive so long as under preparation 
preservation or transfer to a cause; then coordinate when of a 
succeeding cause opportune. For examples to this-, see muscles 
of the body and legs moving the body arms and mouth to vicinity 

3 



of prehend, and prehension in its turn to eat or swallow of a 
purely passive coherence etc of succession to digestion, then a 
potential of coordinate in nervous muscular material force or 
warmth, then a pure passive again of elimination: see also 
growth of root and leaf to nourishment, capillary and absorbent 
prehension, and combination to all plant life, and animal use of 
it. Also of attention, and recipiency of sensation to judgment 
memory emotion volition or muscularity resultant-, see antece- 
dent causinp-s and effects impactive of molecular causings and 
effects conjunctive of nerve to finish of them thus a terminate, 
[3 m]. 

n For examples of thing per factor their any commonality 
of concert-, see motor motortendent resistent or passive structure 
coordinate or product an any unequal or equal antagonism in 
attraction impact stress or strain any wise coupled — (never 
other) : — impact (a movement transmuted into other movement 
and cause), ever of simple or successive collision or friction 
massive, or electricity heat (23) light sound see hear feel taste 
smell or think elementary — (3x) ; stress as consecutive causes 
and effects first one and then the other (as successive elementary 
pressures), or strain as elementary successive attractions tether 
of elements, ever of opposition with wind wave current buoyancy 
leverage tension stay or pressure — an exhaust of all phenomena. 
[Of concert in stress and strain-, see bone and sinew coordinated 
to muscular contraction, and all other couplets like or similar 
in nature and art (Fig 3) : of impact consecutive of elementary 
concerts-, see brain a concert center of nervous impacts recipient 
and motor of nerve to each sense, and the emotions and other 
organs apart or concert through a sensorium or other nervous 
center. See Brain and Nerves Carpenters Human Physiology, 
and note concerts right and left of the brain and body as paired 
organs separate or concert of use; also paired muscles stresses 
and strains of opposite singular organ movement vibratory or 
circular, and tubular expansions and muscular constrictions 
paired in concert, z [Of concert in events perishing to great 
evolutions variably continuing-, everything great to a least cir- 
cumstantial touch of the whole result, is a concert to that 
effect — (continuing in whole or part afterwards) : so of the 
effects at any changed stage of succession, a least change in the 
product, is a part of the whole. See smaller beginnings to great 
concerts of political literary national international and suc- 
ceeding influences and do circumscribly past to present — 22 **]. 
Factors of thing concert, every combine in a some likeness 
unlikeness or resemblance of parts name of it in aggregation: — 
thus a regiment party or sect (a systematic concert of individ- 
uals) , are composed of officers and privates or leaders and mem- 



bers unlike in the factors name of rank: so of their named 
doings in causings and effects repetitive of organization: The 
factors concert an any thing mineral water air vegetable animal 
or contrived, are all composed of masses molecules atoms caus- 
ings movements and equipoises alike each other in species named 
and resembling in their collections of species named : so of mole- 
cules and atoms elementary of structure, and causings and effects 
internal or external themselves. 

For examples of thing a causing to an effect, and total or 
constituent of human doing-, answers to the following questions 
will illustrate many of them: — Any thing I can do? What 
nothing about the storm? Heard anything from John lately? 
Tell us all things little and big that happened you while gone; 
He said some very good things about that I allow; I know that 
I have done many things I should not have done, and left undone 
many things I should have done: "She had a written character 
as large as a proclamation; and according to this document 
could do everything of a domestic nature that I ever heard of, 
and many things I never did hear of": "Folk mon do some- 
thing for their bread and so mon death." "What sort of a thing 
are you anyway", etc. 

Again: an associated construction of an associated result 
in build or manufacture transportation, preservation, or distri- 
bution is a thing do something — (so of any resultant part) : 
The election of a president senator or congressman (collectively 
whole, or individually apart) is a thing do something — the total 
effect a president senator or congressman to their any concert 
doings motor or resistent of that the consequent. [For other 
grouped illustration of thing as succeeding causes and. effects 
to simple and concert results-, take notice of the any factoral 
and collect movements and pauses apart and resultant a me- 
chanic farmer merchant lawyer or gang of men at reptitive 
work: also associated causations and effects successive and re- 
sultant an any all nervous impacts contractions stresses and 
strains (m) concert of prehend eat digest eliminate walk crawl 
fly run ride stop alight lie down get up sit stand look listen 
touch taste smell reflect reason determine consider talk laugh 
sing cry sob smile etc. [All functions or effects simply alike, a 
species same; and all collections of such in resemblance (a con- 
cert class to sense), a kind collect of species]. 

mn Factors of thing do something, ever combine in some 
variable likeness difference or resemblance throughout their 
whole: — thus a hop step or jump (concerted results seen of con- 



certed causings concealed), are all respectively like causings and 
effects — (each a species) : the operation of a pile driver, com- 
prises of each concert act a set of simple causes and effects 
(massive molecular and atomic) in the men or other motor and 
windless each alike in their repetitions, and of the trip hammer 
impact and sink of pile and noise each unlike — (all a simple 
whole repeated, alike) : Vice versa doings again like and differ- 
ent of consecutiveness and like of repetitions whole or part first 
to last — (so of any concerted consecutiveness and repetition) : 
Again: the hoeing of a hill of potatoes, comprises a concerted 
collection of differing causes movements and pauses that begin 
and end of each hill — (simple of a single part) : the delivery of a 
lecture (a something), comprises a complex set of concerted 
causings movements and pauses (thoughtful (n) articulate and 
bodily) differing and alike until the lecture ends — as its results 
on mind to other causings and effects part or whole consequent. 
[Of thing ultimately definite in species a coherence, see granite, 
red-granite and other; limestone, magnesia and other; coal an- 
thracite and other; horse, hambletonian and other; oak, burr-oak 
and other. Species here subject to divisions in variety, or col- 
lections of them group, z Kind to thing or attribute, a collection 
classly distinguished in any way other than amount: sort, a 
collection kind or amount; amount, a measured or compared 
quantity within an any quantitive,- kind — 4. [Place and time in 
class ever an amount, or a some distinction other in sort — 6] . 

Of things mental, sensation memory conception inference 
emotion motive and volition by themselves mental causes and 
effects in sort, are functional things of sort possessed of attrib- 
utes called kind intensity place and time. 

x For factoring to thing a concert name and fact-, see 
coherent mass a qualitive (3) concert of elementary structures 
causings and effects collect of it, and the earth a concert of these 
whole to gravity and radiation of heat outward as cause, and 
annual and diurnal motion passive to other causes (29) outside: 
also the atmosphere a concert of molecules to motor or resistant 
contact with other thing cause, or movement or calm an effect 
of gravity and heat unequal to equal of force. Of thing a su- 
preme collection of concerts thing, see collection of all structure 
a something named matter; all causings a something named 
force; all passivities a something named effect; all these a some- 
thing namftd NATURE, all nothing a vacancy named space; and 
all minor divisions within these a something named a whatever 
that denoted in a some positive negative or indeterminate word 
or* words singular compound alternative or descriptive — 12. [For 
examples, think out all structures doings or effects circumscriba- 
ble of name; and for their attributes, conjoin to them any ex- 
pressions of form quality quantity place or time — (@@)]- 



n Of species as collections of thing (a factoral cericert 
to sense) variably resembling each other in groups of indefinite 
kind variable, exampled in all species collected in groups named 
physical mineral rock sand clay soil water air etc; species vege- 
table grass tree shrub fruit nut tuber etc; species group in 
animal bird fish quadruped sponge coral etc; species collect in 
activities contrive manufacture conserve transport distribute 
etc; species collect in mind intellect motive volition emotion 
(3 $$ &&) like dislike want don't want sensation memory con- 
ception inference perception do not do; etc etc of all natural 
word divisions (13 n, 15 A n) supreme to collections any of 
modified words (13*) to other species constructed. [& Of 
false or erroneous collections, see species in name often wholly or 
partially false the facts amiss in its interested or deluded cir- 
cumscription: — see in this shadow image dream and inanimate 
forces deluding indoctrinated as volitional spirits; disembodied 
spirits deludingly indoctrinated as genii or gods; and Idealism 
deludingly indoctrinated a reality, sensation a nonentity, and 
consciousness a belief: Also questionable placings of thing in 
or out of "Survival of the Fittest" through passions of belief 
or disbelief otherwise affected, and interested class ificatory in- 
sinuations of combinate extortions a legitimate right ^ — de- 
ludingly or wilfully long of extorting interests and passion bias 
or casuistic to right, and short of depleted interests and passion 
befoged or helpless to right. [See insinuations and exclusions 
plot of advantage statutory or abuse our courts of law, and all 
that falsely classed true untrue right wrong correct incorrect 
better best exact inexact etc.] 

n Things as borrowed organs concert to speech, or co-or- 
dinate syllables names and propositions concert to representa- 
tions of thing or attribute in comprehension, are coherences to 
speech: their concerted causations and effects (afferency), are 
functional things named speech — (spoken direct, written by 
translation into the spoken) : their representation of thing in 
mind, is sense of a whatever thing promptu of speech; their 
representation of configuration or combination in or abstract 
of thing, is sense of a whatever form promptu of speech; their 
representations of color sound feel taste or smell sensational, or 
molecular or atomic composition and function conceptive, is 
sense of a whatever quality promptu of speech; their represen- 
tations of amount in density extension number weight energy 
velocity stability coincidence or incoincidence apart or whatever 
way combined, is sense of a whatever quantity promptu of 

7 



speech; their representations of place or time, a sense of the 
same promptu of speech @. [All phonic or written letters 
words names etc alike, are a species (variably definite,- 8 n n z) 
and any collection of them a group of species,- variably indefin- 
ite — see collections phonic or written of vowel consonant root 
prefix suffix inflection noun adjunct subject verb predicate prop- 
osition discourse essay conversation or other named collection. 
z In sensations of thing or attribute familiar unfamiliar or 
indeterminate, or thought of them by internal nervous recip- 
iency same (11 A *), note how quick to slow they associate 
themselves with articulate name or names to self; vice versa of 
thought incident of name (or image), note how quick to slow 
they bring up thing or attribute they represent in general 
experience — natural size shape color feel etc. Language vocal, 
an articulation of elementary sounds syllabic in word by modula- 
tion of borrowed vocal chords diaphragm mouth lips tongue and 
nose distinctly developed to other more vital functions, and in- 
trude and halt of them. Articulation, a variably forcing out 
and suppressing, or suppressing and letting out of the mouth 
or nose or both vocal vibrations tension and distension of dia- 
phragmal and chorda! organs stop whole or part primary func- 
tion yielding momentarily to loan of function superposedly 
useful useless injurious destructive or parasitic to other func- 
tion — aspirations simple and suppression diaphragmal, a vowel 
(not its name) or interjection; aspiration and suppression 
mouthy, or suppression mouthy and aspiration simple, a conso- 
nant or syllable — (sound of vowels and consonants in name, 
variably altered in syllable — Appendix A) : their combinations, 
speech — see aglutinate and monosyllabic combination and varia- 
tion of these in spoken language, and their symbals same in 
written language. All words in themselves apart (prehistoric 
mostly) , are unapplied universals of general experience indefinite 
of application until limited by other words to that of a less 
general or particular application — (13*). Words not exactly 
synonymous or distinct, variably mix up with each other in their 



<I Of misleading place of thing in word to allurement of 
others (65)-, see falsity of facts to verbose names politeness 
flatteries familiarities lies apologies attentions approvals praises 
exaggerations colorings supressions assurances warnings preju- 
dices popularizations implications reasons examples exaltations 
colorings suppressions assurances warnings prejudices popular- 
izations implications reasons examples exaltations deferences 
depreciations denunciations endorsements gifts or endowments 
decoy hold or allay of others to some concealed interest wordily 
falsified in pretention other. [For delusions here, see wordy 

8 



elements of construction — (hence when compounded, are often 
solecistic) ; words ever representatives of thing or attribute a 
name, or their any copula of sort in a some description or defin- 
ition general or particular of them. 

@ See in all this utter impossibility of making another 
understand that in ones thought of want without understood 
words names etc alike, are a species (variably definite,- 8 n n z) , 
also that promptu to ones hesitancy of memory otherwise re- 
coverable or not of internal impulse recipient. [See stuttering 
remedied by suggestive words, and forgetfulness amended by 
rcord or other signs recall of object to thought. See further 
outside phenomena and discoveries of genius never to occur to 
most mind other that promptu of speech or imitations flash of 
such to their minds — genius ever the first real lifter of man 
in knowledge and art, greatly shadowed to obscurity by mad- 
dening ambition and noise of officialism worshipfully mistaken 
for the beneficiaries of mankind. 

For benefits of invention-, see ease aid and multiplication of 
labor in implements and machinery so slowly come about as 
their absence to be unappreciated: — to realize this-, conceive of 
any number of persons cast off on an uninhabited island, and 
study out what could be done in the way of food shelter clothing 
and implement; then divest this of our knowledge-, and we 
would have primitive man, and the field wide open for innova- 
tion]. 

@@ By Understood sign signal or articulation a neces- 
sity to transfer of knowledge within to others without (1 n @, 
8u u z)-, information comes of a some circumscribed experience 
of thing or attribute environing (11a x), and its representation 
in some learned sign signal or articulation (apart or whatever 
way combined) meaningly general to proposition and widening 
of application in development **I; and by symbol a factoral 
mode of written information (*@)-, articulation became dupli- 
cated of a quiet attention to symbols and their translation into 
thoughtful articulation of the actual and basic. [Language then, 
a learned use of signs or articulations name of things or attri- 
butes, and a copula of them to a some recognition or discrimina- 
tion or no of them in concert word. See Philosophy and Alpha- 
bet Encyclopedia Britanica: — Polyphony change of sense, a re- 
petitive use of characters same by alternate change of objective 
application in accent (63 u) or gesture changeful its basic mean- 
ing until represented by other symbol: Alphabetism, a giving 
of optical signs to factors aglutinately consonate and vowel of 



imaginations a false and unremunerate consideration to most 
patronized partisanism spiritualism mystic-cult cure and all other 
imagined values a false commodity: and for shortages same-, 
see the withheld worthless or damaged residues to short values 
of stinted useless or injuring products — see damages of informa- 
tive falsehoods, vicious trainings, false notions, and bad exam- 
ples of affirm deny approve or allow; also commodities of sale 
or barter a cheat damage or destruction of other valuable com- 
modities,- a short or minus product to wealth — See plus and 
minus values of algebra, and 33** and 39A here[. 







syllable mostly (*), and greatly changing of articulation and 
name: conjunction of syllables or words (simple or compound), 
ever a conjunctive curtailing of syllables or words more general 
in all use: compounding of names (12) in subject or predicate, 
an obviation of a repetition eachly in proposition apart: also 
here, see species collected in greater names (15 A u) obviate a 
specific enumeration. & Of other polyphony obviated-, see pro- 
noun substitutive a whatever length of precedent implied; pithy 
reply of conversation intercepted speech or returned missive — 
(for examples, run these through their antecedents implied) ; 
also yes and no translated into their full propositions promptu 
of inquiry. For polyphony obviated in pronoun plural or sub- 
jects compound-, disperse them enumerately through their pred- 
ication single or compound; so of a subject dispersed through 
each of a compound predication: also note disperse proposition 
noncollect of a courts subpoena same but subject to each, and 
compare this again with a judges instructions to the subjects 
such collected: — See titular disperse and repetitive polyphony 
profusely Penteteuch Homer and other *@. Disperse an any all 
compounds in their separate iterations same or equivalent (see 
seventy eight predications enumerate of first clause in l^) , 
and to the contrary, compound an any disperse expressions eligi- 
ble into a unity — try Numbers ch 7, ch 35 v 16, 17, 18, Leviticus 
ch. 3, 4. See inability of most persons to a use of much com- 
pound, and the everlasting hazy irrelevant hodge-podge jump- 
about propositions of many authors.] 

* <J The first things and attributes for a first quite natural 
man to learn name gesture or both and verbalise, would be that 
familiar of his quite natural grounds streams vegetation ani- 
mals eatables utencils clothing sleeping shelter danism weather 
spell fire smoke water air wind sun moon stars sky clouds 
lightning thunder rain sunshine day night morning evening 
winter summer, I you he she they us it that this these them, 
man woman mother child spirit (present or absent) body legs 
arms head feet mouth nose eyes ears hair nails chin fingers 
toes teeth skin bone meat blood: am is was be no not yes what 
may go gone went came come meet part bring brought get left 
lost found, ly stand sit fall drop spill dip pour walk limp run 
crawl climb slip catch hold rub itch cut stick hack break split 
scratch strike talk fight quarrel kill jab bleed, push pull lift 
press help hinder make fix loop lend swap give, breathe bite 
hurt, fly light swim sink float smile cry play laugh moan, look 
listen feel taste smell thirsty hungry, want like dont-like fear 
tired hurt hurts know dont-know think, same alike different so, 
will wont do can can't don't did didn't crooked straight forked 
curved round flat hollow slant edge back side top bottom end 
point, dark light white blue green yellow red bright black, hot 
warm cool cold chilly pleasant, wet dry soft hard rough smooth 
sweet sour bitter good nasty stink, then now to-be here near 
about off aside along far above below out in or under to from 
by up down high low where, long short thick thin slender narrow 
wide big little, er est beyond up down way yonder, few many 
one two etc, a the more less some much to-day yesterday tomor- 
row before after now ever then when, quick slow young new, 
take pick bite eat swallow drink spit spew sneeze suck cook eat 

10 



sleep waken tan sew tie grow live well sick die dead rot born, 
his mine may yours theirs ours, had have of for with all part 
right left good bad why how ed ing, and some other fundamental 
words and syllables somehow equivalent to these primary dis- 
tinctions and separate coalese prefix or suffix to noun pronoun 
verb conjunction adjunction person number tense activity passiv- 
ity or state,- a construct of name (12, 13*) or proposition then. 
& [Of natural forces volitionalized in words-, See in language 
primitive to present verbs and names human applied to inani- 
mate objects by all causes primitively conceived conscious spirit 
and human like — see personified nature real to the primitive or 
so far unreasoning intellect, and figurative to the more rational 
later. Purely distinct languages by their fundamentals entirely 
different, are languages of insulate beginnings of insulate races 
of insulated origin to speech — 29 x. New concert of language, 
a new experiencing and polyphonic or new naming of new struc- 
tures activities uses collections or distinctions in the old (with 
or without extraneous names notions do or objects and their 
names from foreign information examples make plan or intrus- 
ion spreadingly introduced and varied from source) , and the 
widening substituting or analogizing a first specifis name into 
it a name of a family same or other collections of varieties 
(the first species), as that developed of new application yet or 
not yet widening of application to other grouping of these in 
new name — see go first a walking widen into all sorts of go 
since; and see a stick plow and horn point analogically named 
(by rooting action) a sow and snout. Writing at first, rude out- 
lines of external structures posings pasivities and activities 
verbally abstract of poly-phonic names verbs times places or 
quantities concertly conjoined or coal^sed in subject or predi- 
cate a proposition; or as names polyphonically indiced of con- 
text or other implication to other objects applied, or prefixed or 
suffixed to a one or many others fitting each a polyphonic limita- 
tion of one by the other (13**) : — All as modify ingly conjoined 
(13*) or abstractly coalesed names and conjunctions to still 
further use singly, or a some abstract or concrete wear and tear 
consolidation of sort a syllabic word, or prefix or suffix syllable, 
and add or substitution word of others afterward; so of certain 
long ago prominent syllables reduced to vowels or consonants 
polyphonically concerted to many syllables widening of applica- 
tion. Of above, see eye to eye-water, eye-sight, eye-lash etc; 
water in water-fall watermelon etcs and see a substitution of 
eye-water in tears, and water-fall in cataract etc: of prefix or 
suffix worn from words joined to limitation of each other, trace 
such where etymology furnishes the record. [See difficulties of 
interpreting originals by their substitutes within a same lan- 
guage, their translations into other, or their meanings applied 
many ways: — See "Alphabet Ency' Britt' — there the original 
to "holiness" and "slave," are same in the first a subjection to 
God, and the second a subjection to man.. See again "ship" as 
a varying active tack applied to fire as "flickering flame," and 
a varying active tack to weave about speech in loquacity; etc — 
likely of its eight other applications somehow a weaving in 

IT 



"tchen" @t. Of attribute constructed in a verb-, see all activi- 
ties coalesced in any present or parts time — (see "go" etc above 
and ing and ed other) : of attribute conjoined-, see separately 
named times places and quantities conjoined to any name of 
thing or other attribute,- polyphonically exhausting it of appli- 
cation: concert of words here, a connection of words simply to 
modification without conjunctive word, or through conjunctive 
words (15 c) indicating the how of conjunctive values — see of 
in by through etc. & Proposition, is a concert of name or 
names a subject with name or names (12) a predicate to a some 
express or implied description or definition (13, 14) of object 
general or particular in thought, and plainly to hazily brought 
to view in the description or definition constructed — (Su u z z) : — 
hence of recognition (15 a) or discrimination of thing or attri- 
bute-, the thing or attribute as seen in thought is to be attended 
to and not the description or definition (suggestive) often con- 
fuse or false to experiences wide to narrow and plain to hazy 
in our collective remembrances touching such in their associated 
factors variably perceptive or conceptive — 11a.. Names in prop- 
osition, ever an any designation of a something or attribute 
recognized as a subject, and that recognized a portion or whole 
of it again in a predicate (13, 14), or that recognized as a sub- 
ject, and that recognized as a predicative discrimination of it 
wholly or partly subject. For examples to this, keep this of 
name in mind to any names used in any sorts of speech : and for 
variations of intelligence in people special or in general-, note 
differences of their surroundings and associations Avith others 
to differences of experience and influence to variable perception 
and belief or disbelief. Recognition here, is an any perception 
or conception of thing in its self or its any attributes of form 
quality distance direction extension intensity weight density 
number, place or time by remembrances of their any same- 
nesses likenesses or resemblances concert of prior experience : 



@i See this word here translated "ship" likely itself a 
newer application of an older idea and word to an older art than 
ship build in weave the name of two weaving movements in the 
making of cloth,- that of cloth first wove in a perpendicular 
warp and bone shuttle needle got the name weave from a more 
original name given to a forward and back movement of a tree 
in the wind,- the real origin of the idea and name weave: so 
likely of spear in its latest application a steel point in a wooden 
shaft going back to a bronze point in a wooden shaft going 
back again to a stone point in a wooden shaft going still further 
back to a bone point in a wooden shaft to a still further original 
a selected stick pointed in the fire, and this to a natural phenom- 
ena of a stick burned into by a fire: so likely of any prehistoric 
word in its newest application going back and back to a most 
primitive conception of its like founded in wild nature or first 
art. [See different applications of a same word in our diction- 
aries to an entire disrupt of the word in two or more distinct 
meanings (resembling and still alike in orthography), to a lost 
recognition of them as ever being of a sameword at all, or all 
gone but their roots still recognizable in their variations also]. 

12 



discrimination a distinction of some express or implied like- 
nss difference resemblance individuality or whatever else (15 c) 
in two or more recognized objects. Objects of sense, ever that 
distinguished a something or attribute external to consciousness, 
or that distinguished a sense of self, see hear feel taste smell, 
remembrance conception, want dont wont, like dislike, exhilera- 
tion, depression, the pleasing the displeasing satisfaction dissat- 
isfaction motive or volition. See further our inability to recog- 
nize or discriminate things or attributes outside of experience 
other than analogy, or a negating comprehension experience of 
that not understood — a mystery to those of a wondering curios- 
ity, or the any iterate trainings or proselyteisms of systematic 
belief founded on allegations of thing greatly outside of exper- 
ience]. 

*@ Each, an edited collection and construction of customs 
beliefs epigrams proverbs traditions and legends fractionally 
handed down and becoming a first material to construction or 
editorially stitched and constructed whole to unity when set in 
history or code [Original historic ceremony custom legend and 
tradition, are necessarily the first material to a unified history or 
code setting then variably fast — all an editorially matched 
stitched and constructed whole to other change from others in 
interpolation interpretation or construction again with other 
matter ad finem — polyphony, a sign of the earlier. See Penti- 
tuech Ency' Britt, and New Testament: — the latter, a graft on 
the old here (as other general), and its changes of original 
stitchings to any present — all primitive truths at bottom greatly 
altered by human interests and imperfections priestly kingly 
and other]. 

z Form is configuration or combinate arrangement (27 d) 
of the any factors in structure causing do or effect apart or 
whatever way combined, and simple or collect of it in name and 
fact. [Also-, often denoting sort in kind or amount]. 

m Of form collected in name-, exampled in all forms ab- 
stract of thing round square cubical pyramidal angular flared 
fluted flounced odd irregular long short thick thin wide narrow 
even beveled crooked straight twisted spiral hollow layered seg- 
mental simple complex familiar strange etc of name: of activity 
in form, exampled in all active forms of thing vibratory conduc- 
tive radiative rotary linear orbital locomotive prehensive waving 
wriggling coiling twisting floundering graceful ungraceful irreg- 
ular combinative etc of name; forms active of walking running 
resting boxing wrestling writing sitting standing going sleeping 
cooking etc of name; forms of society government warfare indus- 
try professionalism officialism crime labor amusement ceremony 
worship law trial punishment death burial etc of name. [Forms 
of molecules and atoms, not knownto sense but by their laws of 
function and necessity in space relations, are known to be more 
or less regularly parallel or radiative one to the other whole or 

13 



part. For forms quantitive placeful and timeful(4, 5, 6) Take 
up any good author and look out all expressions expressing or 
implying form.] 

3. Quality is elementary arrangement (4**) and activity 
of any concert of molecular and atomic structures causings and 
effects of sort factor their any simple or compound wholes, and 
simple or collect of it or them in name, and fact. [23, 25, 11 A 
n n.] 

# Distance and direction of particles in atoms, atoms in 
molecules and molecules in mass, and intensity of vibration alike 
or similar give quality in species or collections of species kind — 
see same a collection of species in supreme names color sound 
feel taste smell remember or conceive. [Hence qualitive things 
particle, compose the thing atom; qualitive things atoms, the 
thing molecule; and molecules same, the thing mass. — quality 
here, elementary things to elementary totals.] 

m Of qualities (elementary factoral things) sensational to 
mind-, exampled in all molecular vibrations source of thing in 
see as that named opaque red green blue white black clean dirty 
florid freckled fair speckled beautiful etc to sense of sight; vi- 
brations source of thing on hear as that crash rattle click bang 
snap thunder pound chop sing talk yelp purr pleasing displeas- 
ing etc to sense of hear; vibrations source of thing on cell and 
nerve (11 a*) contact of that named soft hard rough smooth 
warm cold hot electric sticky slippery thirsty' hungry satiating 
painful exhilerating pleasant thoughtful etc to sense of feel; 
vibrations source of thing on taste or smell as that tastingly or 
smellingly sweet sour bitter fragrant stinking savory unsavory 
etc of name. [Take up any good author, and note all names 
expressing or implying quality abstract or concrete.] 

X The manifestations of thing or attribute external are 
ever through certain molecular causes and movements of sort 
suitable and radiative or conductive (28) of object distant to 
and disturb of organs of sight or hearing, irritant of object 
contact with outer cell and nerve to feel taste or smell, and 
again differentially conductive of nervous vibrations tubular and 
reflex to recipient mind — (see Carpenter's Hum.' Phy'ol.' See's 
444, 460, 557, 572, and 7 m &&, 11 A* z, n n here) : — of seeing 
hearing touching tasting or smelling-, all as sensations of thing 
or attribute (cause objective) by molecular vibrations of atoms 
conjoined within and without of conjunctive impact to qualitive 
transfer (27) of the same in nerve of kind and intensity to 
brain passive, and recognition or discrimination of it by a some 
remembered sameness likeness resemblance or distinction object- 
ively aroused and concert to it in nervous recipiency internal — 
(9) ; negative of object absent or disagree to see feel etc. [See 
examples of quality above. & Concerted area or volume, and 
configuration of concerted molecular motions afferent to see or 
touch, give the sense of mass form collection division direction 

14 



and distance: change or stability of this in mass, the sense of 
massive movement velocity or inertia: sense of force (weight 
energy or stability), is by feel of muscular and nervous pass- 
ivity of effort or resistance to force: sense of intensity of force, 
is by degree of pressure tension or effort in various nervous 
feel of muscular and nervous contact with force. Place, is 
posited immediately oiunmeasured direction and distance per- 
ceptive, and time, of period in unmeasured duration same. [See 
rude estimates of time and place among savages the beginning 
of all measures to such afterwards]. 

$$ Intellectual qualities of mind (molecular and atomic 
conditions of mind (46*) to apprehension), are the any percep- 
tive conceptive and inferencial concerts of brain nerve and mind 
status (25) an any wide to narrow, correct to incorrect, useful 
to unuseful, and good to bad knowledge afferent its any internal 
and external Influences Submissive of experience (11 a, 10, 
11 D) conceit, information, recommend, example, (8 n n z) pre- 
cedent, praise, approve, ridicule, denunciation, advice, ask, dig- 
nitary reserve (8 n n z) , deference, deferential display, and 
swarmery incident of time and place f — (11 c €J, 11 A CJ, 1 €fl, 
16 A, 11 B) : and moral qualities of mind (54) , the any differing 
concerts of mind to knowledge or no of right or wrong conduct 
and regard or no of rights to self (52 *) or others. [& Our 
morals are made up of right or wrong motives and behavior; our 
intellects of object and recognition or discrimination — (15 A, 15 
B, 15 c) ; motive the any nervously molested or unmolested urg- 
ings of something (a knowledge) in positive or negative want, 
and real or believed ability — (knowledge again) : Volition the 
any effect of unmolested or prevailing motive (50 x) and ner- 
vous defer or turn on or off cause or no of attention or muscular 
do of something; recognition or discrimination, the any posi- 
tive negative or indeterminate perception or inference or percep- 
tion and inference to know of recipient thing or attribute ner- 
vously afferent in any sensation memory caprice information 
precedent dictation ask denunciation praise derision persuasion 
or example: — knowledge inferencial of necessity experience or 
truthful authority, as often wholly or partially viciated by op- 
posing conceits likes dislikes wants dont wants of sort (11 d x) 
personal i, or influence defer of others in free or interested 
information example praise approval dictation derision (65) 
petition advice dignitary reserve and deferential display of sort 
authoritively and deferently (8 n n z) oppositional. && Of 
fundamental distinctions of mind-, internal sensations of want 
don't want, like dislike, the agreeable or disagreeable of sensa- 
tion memory or conception, belief disbelief or indetermination, 
are effects of sort mentally passive || of attention; while de- 
termination to do or not do #, are causing s of sort mentally 
purpositional of motive: — Motive then first, an any nervously 
recipient effect of something (a causing objective) to want or 
don't want and ability (real or assumed), and second a causing 
of volition succeeding: volition first an immediate effect nervous 
of motive the cause, and second a nervous defer or turn on or 
off causing of attention or no inquisitive, or muscular function 
or no objective — (28) ; knowledge, a positively active effect 

15 



nervously intuitive of thing or attribute recognized or discrim- 
inated by a some recipiently experienced sameness likeness re- 
semblance or distinction of sort co-existently in remembrance. 
z Recipiency (afferency a nervous causing objective) of sense 
@, always double of two terms comparatively together of any 
perception of objects to sense of sameness likeness or resem- 
blance recognitive (15 A, 15 B, 15 c), or distinction discrim- 
inative — (two fundamental sorts of afferent causing and com- 
prehension) : want and ability or inability met, two recipiencies 
(nervous causes) to motive or no motive. [See Carpenter's 
Human Physiology Nervous System. Demonstration here, an 
invariable experience of mental phenomena in internal percep- 
tion. See Carpenter 569-572: also power of external influ- 
ences on the will]. 



t "Every generation is born to us direct of heaven; white 
as purest writing paper, white as snow: everything we please 
can be written upon it, and our pleasures and our negligence, 
is to begin blotching, scrawling it, and smutching and smearing it 
from the first day it sees the sun." [Carlyle. Note here falling 
on influences of nasty trashy journalism to corrupt politics 
commercialisms and crafty schemes of sort fool and filch of 
others: also propagating influences of political and other beliefs 
of sort pamper of a few, and fleece of the many. & For en- 
vironing influences casually somehow of the possibly any how-, 
see societies and surroundings world over: and for the same 
succeedingly mould of knowledge and do greatly past-, see such 
strangely different and quite lost to the now in early communi- 
ties surroundings and thoughts tribally savage patriarch walled 
town etc, and later military and industrial aggregations of 
these rude to the more advanced in art and knowledge; all, as a 
narrow phenomena and experience of things different, and 
without the least glimpse of that strangely lying to them in the 
future to mould of other sensation and thought so different as 
to quite blind the advanced period to a comprehension of its 
own past,- fading away to obscurity of incomprehension by a no 
experience of it outside contemporary savages and rude others 
taken to a representation of them muchly different — hence-, 
man is a creature of environing sensations thoughts emotions 
and do of his time quite insulate his greater past and future — 
the latter a greatly inappreciated variable of looks in the land- 
scape home and other, and thoughts and do of the time. An 
illustrated fiction and detail of what prehistoric and early his- 
toric man saw thought talked and did, a great subject now open 
to genius assiduity and divestment of the since. A translation 
of the Old Testament Scriptures by a vocabulary true of the 
time, a fine frame work for a prehistoric people come to us 
through changes and corruptions of original fractions text — 
(See Pentetench Ency' Britt') : Also many cuniform inscrip- 
tions and hieroglyphics of sort now come to light, and guide of 
modern Authropoligy (see Spirits World and Arts of Life 
Taylor's Authropology) , another subject of greater antiquity 
and interest — landscape and life here, a subject for the painter. 
[Of a representative past with the present-, compare the sur- 
roundings of an Atlas or Soudan Berber to that of a Parisian 

16 



U. Quantity is definite or indefinite amount singular or 
comparative of thing or attribute, and name a some distance 
direction (implied angle) height depth length breadth thickness 
area volume number weight density energy velocity momentum 
stability (inerta) coincidence incoincidence or both. [Each 
amount in form alike (or same in kind), is a species of quantity.] 

Frenchman; of a new surrounding to a new experience individ- 
ual-, "Oliver left to himself in the undertakers shop xxx, gazed 
timidly about him with a new feeling of awe and dread. An 
unfinished coffin on black trestles which stood in the middle of 
the shop looked so gloomy and death-like that a cold tremble 
came over him every time his eyes wandered in the direction of 
the dismal object;" and "against the wall were arranged in 
regular array a long row of elm boards cut into the same 
shape, looking in the dim light like high shouldered ghosts with 
their hands in their breeches pockets." And of a negative ex- 
perience a blank to apprehension-, "The boy had no friends to 
care for, or care for him: the secret of no recent separation 
was in his mind" and "the absence of no loved and well remem- 
bered face sunk heavily into his heart." 

t "The greatest burden and calamity of the soul, is the 
body — from which she cannot disengage herself but by a wise 
use of reason as shall wean and separate her from all corporal 
passions." [Plato in Cato the Censor Plutarch. Plato however 
did not see the havoc of false assumptions myriad of theory 
and iteration,- a greater evil than the one he condemns : — see 
his ideal theory an assumption of the impress of experience 
general (11 a k) as the only real existence, and the objects of 
sense denied a real existence at all — see this in all speculative 
philosophy up to skepticism,- a. huge bewildering and elaborated 
intellectual sommersault from Pluto up. 

"I don't know how it is said Peggot}? - unless its on ac- 
count of being stupid, but my head can never pick and choose 
its people — they come and go; and they don't come and they 
don't go just as they like." 

"Fell in love! What business had sh^ to do it: — perhaps 
Mr. Dick simpered she did it for pleasure." [Dickens.] 

"It would trouble me sadly to make him unhappy — for I 
couldn't fall in love with the dear old fellow merely out of 
gratitude, could I." TJo in Little Women.] 

# Of volitional do-, see attention and what other to look 
listen touch taste smell think talk sing read whistle walk pre- 
hend work etc — attention a volitional impulse and holding do 
of the brain internal to muscularity or no connected otherwise 
to nervous turn on or off of volition — of muscularity independ- 
ent wholly or mostly to volition-, see beating of the heart diges- 
tion breathing and other. 

@ By qualitive movement (3) the effect end of thing a 
causing and effect (causing the other factor)-, know here and 
want don't want like dislike the pleasant or unpleasant and the 
satisfied or unsatisfied in themselves the conscious here, are the 

17 



** Every form of coherence or activity (simple or col- 
lected) within th'e universe, has to itself or each other (part to 
part whole to whole) of any or all instants of time a some certain 
quantitive relation of distance direction length breadth thick- 
ness area volume density weight energy velocity momentum 
inertia sameness likeness difference or resemblance. [Distance 
and direction of thing part to part or whole to whole, give 
form extent density and place; distance and direction of coher- 
ence to time, give form extent and velocity of movement, or 
place and time of pause from movement; density extent and 
molecular and massive attraction, give inertia of stability. [11 
A n ri]. 

m Of quantitive amounts singular or comparative of kinds 
definite or indefinite-, exampled in all amounts named so any 
express or implied inches feet yards miles, grains ounces pounds 
cwts tons, seconds minutes hours days weeks years, degrees, 
individuals etc each a kind of specific amounts collectively linear 
square cube weight time number or degree — (degree, the any 
values of angle coincidence incoincidence or both, or an any sta- 
bility momentum or intensity) : all ratios of number or amounts 
alike, each a species of amount value of the ratios same in 
equality; all unlike, a collection of species supreme in inequality. 
[13 n.] 

Of quantitive amounts ratiol of sorts indefinite, exampled in 
all amounts of sort compared a bigger heavier or lighter load; 
the larger of the two; one as heavy as the other; the slower of 
the two; the greatest living man; the wiser of the two; further 
that way; this longer this shorter; this the whiter, this the 
whitest; one as white as the other; the brighter of the two; 
duller dullest; harder hardest; softer softest; colder coldest; 
hotter hottest; temperatures same; sweeter better best; sharper 
sharpest; one as sharp as the other; thinner thinnest, wiser 
wisest; same size, nearer square of the two; nearer alike; great- 
er difference; a lesser resemblance of the two; likeness x, unlike- 
ness y; 2:4; quite consonant; quite according to the truth — (coin- 



concomitant results (20) of a nervous recipiency their causes: — 
hence recipiency of mind external and internal or wholly inter- 
nal and productive of the feelings recognition or discrimination 
and the apprehension itself, are things effective as k)ioivledge r 
perceptive or inferencial : and nervous recipiency of a some in- 
ternal unsensed nervous impulses cause (11 D y, z) and pro- 
ductive of feelings in sort called want don't want like dislike 
the pleasant or unpleasant and the satisfied or rnsatisfied, are 
things (causings and effects) effective as emotion — the effect?, 
qualitive things conscious; the causings thing, a some ante- 
cedent recognized or not. 

18 



cidence quite) ; at great variance with the truth — (great incoin- 
cidence) ; etc. 

Of quantitive amounts singular of kinds indefinite, exampled 
in all amounts of sort named a wagon load; a heavy load; sever- 
al loads; a car lot; wholesale lots; retail quantities; a barrel 
or so; a cupful; a handful; a chew; a "right smart;" "just 
slathers of them;" a goodly number; tremendous; extremely 
loud; very cold; extremely painful; very pleasant; very sour, 
very fragrant; of unusual intelligence; unusually ignorant; very 
lively; a falling price; a rising market; more than satisfactory; 
very bold; tide low; high waters; great suffering; poverty ex- 
treme; very windy; with great pleasure; a great liar; un express- 
ible sorrow; wonderful, astonishing; an inestimated amount; a 
man of unusual varacity; well trained — (coincidence of degree) ; 
poorly ordered — (incoincidence of degree); long long ago; in- 
finity past etc. [Better best wiser wisest of above and other 
such comparisons, imply of other and wiser a some degree of 
incoincidence with other term or terms inferior, and of best or 
wisest, a grading incoincidence to all behind it to lowest; vice 
versa of worse or worst, a comparison exactly the reverse of this 
in indefinite ratio double or grading. For definite amounts in 
kind, see same per tables of measure or number, and extrica- 
tions of definite amount in terms enigimical until brought out 
by certain rules of ascertainment. [Take up any good print 
and note express or implied quantity of thing or attribute direct, 
or comparative with other.] 

5. Place is any sort of surface or space distinguishable 
in itself, or simple or systematic position of any part parts (2) 
whole or wholes of thing in simple or systematic location move- 
ment or equilibrium. 

m Of place in itself, exampled in any species of place 
named low place, high place, rough place, hilly place, smooth 
place, open place, beautiful place, horrible place, airy place, 
dark place, rich place, heavenly place, wet place, safe place, 
etc. of all places in names of place in form; all occupational 
places systematically official clerk bookkeeper, servant etc., and 
all locations of enterprise. Of thing in place particular-, exam- 
pled in the stars of night, are situated in the heavens promis- 
cuously about us; Seventeen years ago-, the star Algol was sit- 
uated in right ascention three hours, and declination forty de- 
grees and twenty-three minutes; Argus, ten hours and forty 
minutes, and fifty-nine degrees one minute south: The Denver 
Express is now between Selsa Station and first town West — 
(general of all such in experience) : Right over there; inside 

19 



the city limits; in Rome; within a log cabin abouth twenty rods 
south by five rods west the north east corner of the south west 
quarter of the north west quarter of section five Township 
seventy one north, Range two west, Des Moines county Iowa: 
My position now (1895), about seventy rods west by forty rods 
south of the north east corner of Section twenty eight, Town- 
ship forty nine, Range thirty one, county of Jackson, and State 

of U. S. A. [Occupation of a same place 

continued indefinitely, is position general of a same place. Take 
up any good author, and note all names (12) expressing or 
implying place of thing or attribute direct or comparative with 
other] . 

6 Time is an any point or period of duration in all time, 
or an any duration of something or attribute in change pause 
location existence or no existence. 

M Of measured time-, illustrated of any one or more 
named seconds minutes hours weeks months etc. as an individual 
increment, or its recurrent periods in minute hour week month 
etc. respectively alike in duration and form a species: of un- 
measured time, exampled of inaccurately estimated time named 
forenoon afternoon morning evening midnight dawn sunrise 
sunset twilight January February March winter spring summer 
autumn past present future etc.,- individual or specific: of less 
definite time, see forms of time planetary geologic azoic pale- 
zoic mesezoic etc., reptilian mammaalian etc., prehistoric his- 
toric ancient etc., age of stone, age of bronze etc., times of sav- 
agery times of barbarism etc. particular of instances, and con- 
ceptively general of such in all phases of planetary develop- 
ment: of times connected with things kind, exampled of times 
called joyous times, dismal times, good times, bad times, war- 
ring times, peaceful times, getting up time, breakfast time, din- 
ner time, bed time, day time, night time, business hours, hours 
of rest etc. of all other times individual or specific. [Take up 
any good author, and note any and all consolidations conjunc- 
tions and comparisons of time to thing or attribute express or 
implied — consolidated of -ed, -ing, went, was, were, are, is, exists, 
etc. For the negative to time and all other expression-, see pre- 
fixes and suffixes to the positive in un-, in-, im-, non-, don't, not, 
-ent and other.] 

20 



GENERALS AND PARTICULARS IN KNOWLEDGE. 

7 Generals in knowledge, are the any apprehensions 
(11) of external or internal things (1) or attributes as that 
a coalesion class of them in general memory conception or 
both. [9*, 8, 11#] 

CI €j Axiomatic theoremic or other generals, a some rel- 
atively largest or larger generalization to some few or many 
smaller or smallest generalizations within — (15 A n) : Axioms 
containing any number of theorems (family gradients) below, 
become minor when placed within a higher general including 
it with others: — for instance. All animals are mortal would be 
universal to all divisions within, and partial of the general- 
ization, All things that have a beginning have an ending: also 
equality or inequality become minor of likeness or unlikeness 
that include all attributes other than quantity as well as all 
thing coincident or incoincident. [See abstract number a col- 
lective of all its applications a species — 4 m Necessity per- 
tains no more to axioms than their theorems or individals — 
individuals the elements of the generals, being one and the 
same thing,- or factors and sum — individuals first to knowl- 
edge in sensation, generals second in abstraction — 11 a m] 

Generals, are distinguished necessary when apprehended 
so absolutely so or not so that a construction of them intui- 
tively annihilates or denies a some necessity of existence or 
no existence connected: invariable when existing or no with- 
out exception throughout a phenomena intuitively subject to 
experience (**), and variable when existing and not exist- 
ing in an any all phenomena intuitively subject of experience: 
false when wholly outside or long or short existence or no 
existence in phenomena subject to experience. 

a Of generals without an exception in a subject of ex- 
perience and point of this to follow-, exampled in All men are 
mortal: and same partial of a subject — exampled in some 
men, are greatly virtuous in their conduct to others. [The 
compounding of an any all factors variable in a subject, pro- 
duces an invariable — as water always cold cool warm or hot]. 

b Of the strength of evidence in variable experience-, 
the strength of the evidence is as the universality of the ex- 
perience species or collection of species, or the positive to the 
negative same: of positive or negative evidence-, exampled in 
Crows always of a black color, and never an any other color 
— (resting on an any all experience) ; and of this the positive 
only-, exampled in all men alive will die — as that of a specific 
experience (evidence) in all men past and under certain age 
have died, and a more general experience in the same and other 
like facts proving that all animals alive and to be will die, and 
still more general experience in same and like facts proving 
that whatever has a beginning will have an ending. 

c In generals taken from a positive and negative premis-, 
if it can be ascertained that postive existence is equal to x 
or the often or not often and its negative existence equal to y 

21 



or the not often or often-, the value of the evidence will be as x: 
y or the often to the not often, or vice versa.. & |_Degree °* 
truthfulness in human testimony (a variable) depends upon 
the greater to less sagacity (8 n u z) and veracity of a witness 
as to what he really perceived (as a disposition to tell the 
truth, and a clear to no discrimination of things of memory 
from conceptive intrusions implicative,-ll A), and the test ol 
his inferences (11 C) in the values of a perfected experience 
(10 m x) or sense of necessity. Confusion of perception here 
with conception intruded unawares, the foundation ot Greek 
skepticism and condemnation of sense knowledge up @J. 

m Of generals necessary-, exampled as follows:— A 
whole of thing and its parts, are same to each other, and vice 
versa: Within an equilateral triangle, is a point equidistant 
from its three sides: all lines radii a circle or globe, are 
equal to each other: equals or unequals added or taken from 
equals, produce other equals or unequals: Divisibility of 
matter force or space to a no matter no force or no space, is 
an impossibility: space divisional or infinite, ever has length 
breadth and thickness: to exist is to occupy space— (therefore 
a point or line existing has length breadth and thickness) : To 
not exist, is not to occupy space— (therefore a point or line 
not occupying space has no existence— see power of deferred 
iteration oppose of this an alternative of existence or no ex- 
istence) : No two or more things, can occupy the same points 
of space at a same time: A something existing, can nevel 
go to nothing; neither can a nothing nonexisting, come inta 
a something existing— (therefore this or that thing whole or 
part (organic or inorganic), cannot in substance or essence 
be annihilated, nor have come from nothing) : matter and 
force, ever possess attributes of form quality quantity place 
and time inseverable of fact: masses molecules and atoms of 
matter and force, ever of a some absolute form size and den- 
sity of structure, form extent and intensity of movement or 

fq) See in this the foundation of Agnosticism (ancient 
and modern) a declaration of the uncertainty of all knowledge ,- 
by a certainty that its statement is positively true— hence a 
solecism destructive of itself and founded on errors of sense 
intruded with memory, and that below and beyond its natural 
boundaries, the infinitesimal and heavenly— positive knowledge, 
ever within the common boundaries of sense and inference. 
Hence theological opposition to speculative science contempor- 
ary,- in that its Philosophy espoused denies common sense a 
criterion of truth, furnishes man no rules for conduct, and em- 
phasizes a system of knowledge greatly recreative to higher 
intellect only, and nonbeneficial to man commonly general. 
["Any testimony the value of which depends upon accuracy in 
seeing, needs to be well sifted: so few persons see straight and 
see whole — they see a part, and then guess or fancy th rest' 
John Burroughs in the Delineator for August 1907] 

22 



equilibrium, and distance and direction to each other: etc. of 
all generalizations of term in necessity. & Of antithesis in 
necessity-, the any one term of a couplet cannot be the other, 
nor the alternative disolved without annihilation of both: — of 
the first-, exampled in the good cannot of itself be bad, nor 
the bad good; conduct always wise or unwise, proper or im- 
proper, right or wrong, equitable or inequitable, economic or 
ineconomic, etc. — (necessary in that any one of the terms 
antithet cannot at the same time be either — however the 
powers potential of the good or bad, wise unwise etc. can be 
transposed one to the other prior the product always good or 
bad. 

@@ Of the second (an alternative)-, exampled in mo- 
tion or rest and color or transparency, a necessary condition 
of thing in all existence; of oppositional forces (19) or other 
term or terms, as the same necessarily equal or unequal or 
like or different to each other in all time; of dimensive mo- 
tion, as motion always concomitantly or oppositely parallel 
divergent or convergent (angular) to each other — (conductive 
or radiative of molecular or atomic motion gaining losing or 
equilibrating in potential) : of variation in oppositional terms-, 
all as increase or decrease of term or terms necessarily arith- 
metic or differential— (see Fig. 1-5, See's 19, 23, 25, 27, 34 x, 
41, 43, 45, 46, 51, 55, 57, 60) : etc. of all other oppositional 
terms (as up down higher lower etc.) singular or alternative 
in necessary knowledge. [All affirmation then involving an 
alternative, is a necessary truth; and all denials same, a ne- 
cessary falsehood. Denial of a necessary inference, a denial 
nullificatory of consciousness — 11 D n $; see all antithesis 
and boundaries of word]* 



* Sense of necessity aroused of object (beginning point) 
in its attribute of untransposable existence or infinite dura- 
tion, is a conception outside of all experience other than its 
own sensation (8, 11d n) , and the object itself in sense and 
its concomitant duration. Of boundaries to word-, see our con- 
ceptions of thing or attribute aroused of word as definitely or 
indefinitely having absolute boundaries in fact discernable or 
not of designation or _ experience : — for example-, see in That 
that exists an expression and thought to that felt to be a set 
of absolute facts; etc. to other expressions set out as words 
simple or absolutely conjoined to name: otherwise see de- 
pendance of word true or untrue to nature or art, a truthful- 
ness or falsity of expression to fact — 9 m, x. Of error in ex- 
pression to fact, see the word the implicative of oU that in the 

23 



Of generals invariable-, exampled in All aggregations of 
matter and force, have a beginning and an ending: All men 
or all animals are mortal: no man is not mortal: The angle 
of reflection is equal to the angle of incidence: Attraction, is 
proportional to electro magneto intensity, quantity of matter 
and globe radii of distance into unity; ve locity is proportional 
to the ratios of force in motor cause to forces in resistance — 
experimental or necessary as proof employed) : The earth 
always revolves from the West to the East, and never the 
contrary: snow (pure), is always of a white color: Ice is 
always cold to the touch: 

Of generals variable-, exampled in animals are greatly 
locomtive and prehensive: Quadrupeds, are mostly toed or 
or cloven footed; Rainfall usually follows a certain low pres- 
sure and moisture of the air: Water sometimes cold and 
sometimes hot: Hearing good to bad: Quinine given proprly 
usually cures chills: Most medicines have little curative or 
beneficial properties: The practice of medicine is greatly ben- 
eficial to the practitioner and little to the patient: The pres- 
ence of the practitioner to the sick and friends, usually quiets 
their fears — (otherwise mostly unnecessary) : Most men of 
all ages of the world have been and still are enslaved creatures 
of training and sentiment prevalent of their time: etc. of all 
knowledge positively or negatively rare to quite all of an any 
phenomena in knowledge. 

expression it points out as often long o that of its context — 
examplified in a life time error of a subject. "The Talk of 

the Day" still stnding in the T with its 

following facts equivalent only to talk of the day a portional 
only of all talk of the day implied in the subject; etc. of much 
other subject expression long or short its context of facts fol- 
lowing. 2 See all disagreement of subject words to their pred- 
icative expressions definitive or descriptive (14, 13), and ex- 
perimentally discriminate absolute sense in mind with objects 
of sensation,- external or internal: — of example-, see "Within 
the true sides of an equilateral triangle ( a concept) , is a point 
equidistant from its three sides"; within these three lines an 
equilateral triangle (a perceptive,- 11 a) , is here placed a 
point so near equidistant from its three sides (16 A *) that the 
sense of sight does not discriminate a difference — (a represen- 
tative (16a) of the absolute in a mental sensation of such. 
Philosophy then, the any coordination of thing or attribute in 
names and proposition absolutely true to fact — dependence, ab- 
solute of dependance a variable, and not of any individual un- 
severed in the terms (x : y) to a species absolute of varia- 
bility. [10 m, x, 1 b c. Absolute here, the fundamental, and 
the variable individual uninsulted from its terms in species, 
ever a secondary (the unproven) until proven in other circum- 
scription amounting to an invariable]. 

24 



8 Particulars in knoivledge, are the any positive nega- 
tive or indeterminate apprehensions (llB *x) of that an indi- 
vidiual something or attribute ivithout us, or that a some sen- 
sation of self remembrance conception (11) inference emotion 
motive volition or do of sort instantly within us **. 
[3 $$, He $] 

** External and internal sensations here, ever the meat 
of memory and conception the coadjutors of other sensation to 
follow — (9) : Memory or conception here, an identification of 
that in its sensation as same with that an original once in 
sensation or never in sensation at all. [See impresses to sen- 
sation incomprehensible of the infant developing thus to com- 
prehension later — 1 @@]. 

Particulars to class, are distinguished necessary invar- 
iable or variable when their negation denies necessary condi- 
tions of existence, or invariable or variable experience: — false 
or erroneous when wholly outside of necessity or experience, 
or long or short of experience, [See Mills' Logic B 3, ch 2 — (as 
with colligation there, naught but particular synthesis with or 
without inferred factors called in by other necessity or ex- 
perience link of those in perception) : Also see Dugald Stew- 
art On The Mind Mathematical Axioms] 

M Of particulars subject to a sense of necessary-, exam- 
pled as follows: This thing here is a same in all its parts: 
This piece of iron here in all its ultimates of division, has ever 
existed: Here about within this equalateral triangle is a 
point equidistant from its sides: etc. of all particulars seen to 
be necessary in apprehension. [See solutions in geometry 
same.] 

Of particulars subject to any invariable experience, exam- 
pled as follows: — Of a thousand or more experiences of cer- 
tain kinds of aggregates within my observation-, they without 
an exception had a beginning and an ending: Of several 
hundred experiments with light-, the angles of reflection were 
all equal to their angles of incidence: Of a thousand and 
more experiments^ in electro-magnetism-, attraction was pro- 
portional to electro magneto intensity-, quantity of matter 
and inverse square of distance — (nearly) : Of many observa- 
tions made of them-, they were found without exception to be 
of a same form size and color: The earth of each suceeding 
day last year and this, moved without exception from the 
west to the east, and never the east to the west: Snow of a 
number of instances I now have in mind was without excep- 
tion white in color, and never an any other color than white: 
Sugar of this and that and that instance of taste was without 
a single exception sweet to my taste, and never sour: Of a 
dozen or more instances of fever I suffered-, they were with- 
out exception a feeling of too great a heat for comfort, and 

25 



never an any other feeling: Of quite a number of instances 
of passing railroad trains-, they without exception produced 
a certain jarring sound and feel alike in kind: The square 
of the hypotenuse of this right angled triangle (of demonstra- 
tion by count of squares)-, was found equal to the squares of 
its sides: In many instances of attention to internal feel- 
ings of mind, recipiency of object was in all the instances 
passive of the attention precedent, and precedently conjunc- 
tive of judgment or no involuntary; and both of instance pre- 
cedent again of motive to or not to volition succeedent, and 
attention or no, and do or no consequent: And so on of all 
instances particular to invariability in experience. 

Of particulars subject* to a variable experience-, exam- 
pled as follows: — Many animals about here are cloven footed: 
Of government record here the last ten years-, rainfall us- 
ually followed a certain humidity and barometric pressure of 
air, and scarcely ever all other conditions: The quinine on 
twenty instances of chill I kept account of, cured them with 
two exceptions; other remedies a trace: This and that neigh- 
bor of mine of this and that instance sold his wares of this 
and that instance with an exception or so to the merchant 
that gave the highest price of his market, and purchased his 
goods at the same time with few exceptions of the merchant 
that sold lowest of his market: This and that neighbor of 
mine of certain instances of trade, wanted a greatest price 
possible of his market for his stuff, and a lowest price possible 
for other's stuff: etc. of all other possible to quite universal 
exceptions particular to generalization. [Say so or sign as to 
truthfulness or falsity, a matter of variable experience — (7 c 
@) : reliance or no on such, a matter of inference. See par- 
ticular expressions of emotion or volition (always individual) 
generalized when brought into mind as matters of knowledge 
general. See language ever an expression of recognition dis- 
crimination emotion volition or to direct or indirect. & of ex- 
pressions to emotion or volition, the knowledge producing them 
is implied. Of volition by influence-, see submissions to infor- 
mation, dictation, example, advice, petition and persuasion.] 

x Things general or particular of activity in sort, are 
continuous periodic or occasional: — as for instance breathing 
and beating of the heart (vital things), continue from birth 
unto death; while functions of digest work sleep repast 
want satiation etc. begin and terminate in periods of recur- 
ring times: The shining of the sun, is continuous of solar 
function, but periodic of day side of the planet: The tides 
are continuous of ocean movement, but its billows of storm 
and calm, are occasoinal: The diurnal motions of the earth 

26 



are continuous, but much of its local phenomena are periodic 
or occasioned — as clay and night, winter and summer, rain and 
sunshine, good and bad seasons, war and peace, love and hate, 
life and death, etc. general or particular. 

n All particulars have corresponding generals in knowl- 
edge when resting on a some sense of necessity or experience, - 
and in knowledge are true or false or true and false as the 
statements may be : — of particulars and generals to such and 
generalization combined-, exampled as follows: This and that 
neighbor of mine in a certain number of their dealings, sold 
their stuff to the merchant of their market who gave the high- 
est price, and bought their goods of the merchant of their 
market that sold cheapest — {particular) : Men usually sell 
their wares for the highest price of their market, and buy 
their goods at the lowest price of their market — general. [An 
incorrect generalization-, per the fact that a highest price and 
a lowest price of a market, are on the whole a rather more an 
exception than a rule, and the additional fact that men in most 
instances of sale or purchase do not know of their market a 
highest price nor lowest of thing in their market — all a state 
of trade resulting from habit trust, difficulty to know, or com- 
binations of merchants to a same price — a contradiction here 
to the amount of usually precedent reduced to the sometimes 
the fact. [For particulars and generals same and more-, see 
the syllogism of Philosophy, and 12c here]. 

Of generalization and all sorts of particulars interspersed-, 
exampled as follows: — This is one of them, this one not, and 
this other can't say really about it — (identification positively 
negatively or indeterminately particular, and general of all 
such particulars know, of such in consciousness) : This one 
is exactly like it, this one entirely different, and this one some- 
what resembling it — (discrimination particular here, and gen- 
eral of all such when collected to knowledge) : I have made 
up my mind about it, he hasn't: I will go sooner or later as 
the case may be but he won't: He wants it, I don't, and she 
doesn't seem to decide about it at all: I don't want it, neither 
does he: I like it very well, but she don't: I hate him above 
all things; she loves him dearly: Very pleasing indeed; this 
weather is very very disagreeable: Indications now better: 
They seem very well satisfied about it — (general of all such 
in their species or collections of them in resemblance to gen- 
eral knowledge) : It crawls a worm of the dust: — (so of the 
species) It is standing up; lying down now: It looks rather 
that way: He is sleeping very soundly — (a classified condi- 
tion) ; The signs are such — (11 x &. : Most men of the pres- 
ent day trade and opportunity-, wilfully cheat others or allow 
them to cheat themselves in their sales and barters of trade — 
(general) : Men of today, are drifting in shoals after this and 
that opinion of iterated error, and little knowledge of the pro- 
pelling and interested power concealed beneath them: Jour- 
nalism of our day place and else, has greatly degenerated into 
party platitude diatribe and official worship; & flattering at- 
tention and select and suppress of say and do popularize or 

27 



exalt @ of politicals clericals professionals millionaires au- 
thors or doctrinals of sort to notoriety or patronage individual, 
or an influential hold of people to an any advance defend or in- 
disturb of political advocational or clerical arrogation soft living 
and conceity distinction class; villification or discredit of opposi- 
tion same, factional flattery hold of patronage, unscrupulous 
advertisement, and an inundating deluge of befogging ramb- 
ling silly trashy clashing unreliable and garbled information 
daze of all @@ — ( all as penny paper rule and 
confuse of thought now quite absolute of the day, and verifia- 
ble of every day experience particular — hence great popular- 
ity of personage (individual or class), depends more on classly 
interested and paid for iteration push of leading press and 
speech (phonophonically infective) than critical knowledge of 
praise: Ornamental writing speech and manners as writing 
classic, are yet by the smattering many considered very im- 
portant subjects of knowledge — (particular of any instance of 
such appreciation show off to "culture" or prestige) : More 
than a few men now, are apprised that much literature oratory 
courtesy and dress, are greatly a fine jugglery of words, false 
attention , and swell appearance to play on fools who 
have money admiration deference favor or patronage 
directly or indirectly for the fiddler. Most of our 
statesmen so called (politicians' star) have been more for- 
tunate than wise: Burke felt that a constituency should not 
judge for its representatives about tihngs beneficial to the 
state, and labored with himself as to what that was by which 
he was to know what was best for the state — (particular of 

(a) Of exaltation to purposed notoriety here, see flour- 
ish of lowly beginning, a great catch enhancement of mis- 
placed esteem and deference here shunt of attention to much 
official and professional sharp play and stupid succor. [See 
further-, power of office and wealth under fascinations of the 
luxury arts, and show off proceedures — a most dazzling al- 
lurement to motive and shunt from essential doing — 33 M. In 
luxury arts, see conceity minded maddening craze of our 
mushroom and other would be aristocracy to ape of titled 
wealth] 

@@ Like the Jews of old-, a social daze that could 
crucify a Christ and never find it out. See unreasoning castes 
customs beliefs fads and fashions a daze of the come and go 
and the come and don't go of society ancient and modern. See 
late and yet the Caucasion craze of elevating the black and 
tan races to white society, and the manufacture of aberantly 
infected youths into aberant orators and professionals of sort 
through ephemeral text books and a greatly dazing school edu- 
cation of our day. The Caucasian populace, but beneficiaries 
of a superior quieter few the real lights of intellectual and 
moral progress, and the real lifters of society step by step 
from a preceeding barbarism — all a product of genius* going 
its predecessors a one better, and an infection of the better 
populace holding up the intervals. [See this quite estopped 
in the colored races to their contact with the whites, and muchly 
of our own race until recent times] 

28 



any instance) : That there is a bush — (a conscious particular 
classificatory) : A Worcester's dictionary — (recognition classi- 
ficatory) : Well I rather guess it a roundish elevation sur- 
rounded with bushes in a plain — (classification dubiously par- 
ticular) : Here are the botanical gardens — (a one of all such, 
identified and designated here) : And here is great America — 
(particular recognition) : That out there is the Bartholdo 
Statue of Liberty enlightening the world — (a particular of all 
statues (here identified and designated), and a likely image 
too of its prototype — imposing without, a big hollow within) : 
Here are the ponderous volumes of our congressional record — 
(a particular collection (identified and designated here) of 
government records, and a true likeness of its authors — a 
ponderous record of hodge podge right wrong whim shrewd- 
ness and cunning actuated in personal class local and other 
legislation and attempted legislation liveried in a load of 
muchly false dress, delusive argument, ruse methods, and per- 
sonal and party diatribe) : Here is kept the largest library in 
the world — (an identified and placed library particular, and a 
labyrinthian mass of human thought and little good) : This 
is Washington's monument — ( a huge pile of foolish masonry, 
and an overbalanced reverence for an over estimated man other 
than that of a true patriot and honest official) : This is the 
United States Treasury Building — (identified etc, and a huge 
pile of antiquated structure, and scholastic reverence for class- 
ical antiquity) <% : The busts of Ciscero and Demosthenes — 
(supposed images of two men great in the play of words to 
local passion, and mediocre in the greater values of a more 
general utterance) : It is white in color, round in form and a 
-specific gravity of six — ( a triple classification of three attrib- 
utes) : That is the one — (identification) : This is the larger — 
(discrimination) : Well he won't; yes I will: He is diong it 
and not I: I wanted it and liked it both: Very pleasant and 
very satisfactory; etc etc of all or any kinds of particulars — 
general of all such when looked at as knowledge. [All species 
or collections of them as that of their names in themselves 
apart are indefinite universals of sort (11 A x) unqualified their 
any eligibilities of divisional collection until limited by other 
names to that of a more or less general to particulars. Par- 
ticulars any number of individuals capable of enumeration in 
fact or assumption. Divisions not exactlly synonymous or dis- 
tinct in collection, variably mix up with each other in their 
elements of specific construction — hence in compound are un- 
avoidably solecistic] . 

n n For particulars to general class of all such, and gen- 
erals to particulars such unclassed in ordinary brevity of con- 
versation-, exampled as follows: — White now and always white: 
sweet sure enough : very loud sure : unpleasantly noisy as usual : 
anything but smooth: painful in the extreme as that before — 
(classed in a general experience such) ; easier now — (ditto) : 

^ "Neither piety nor magnificence appears in your ex- 
pense — you have the disease of building — like Midas of old-, 
you would turn everything into gold and marble" — Plutarch) : 

29 



odorless and tasteless; very savory: there and always there: 
on time as usual — (classification in time) : the larger of the 
two: six pounds exactly,- as all his weights: inestimable now 
and ever so — (a classification) : an inconceivable distance now 
and ever: intense beyond measure — (classification in intensity 
so) : wide apart: always near: never much away: yes I know 
him (identification), and always do know him — (a general): 
I don't know you, and never did — (positive or negative identi- 
fication) : I view it that way, and always have: he don't and 
never did — (recognition or discrimination): saw it there yes- 
terday, just as usual — (identification of something before 
placed) : never to be depended on, and very likely will not be 
here at all — (classification of do reproachful) : always black 
and black now: quite always on hand, and never tardy — (a do 
so) : yes I will — (placed in vloition) : you know I hardly ever 
refuse — ( a placing transferred to author's classification) : yes 
sometimes,- not often: possibly he or I will — (something placed 
in volition possible) ; but don't be to sure about it — (ditto) : 
rest quite assured (advice classed rest assured), and don't trou- 
ble yourself about it — (advice recognized "don't trouble yourself 
about it",- and general of all such) : I know myself,- its me — 
(an identification to information such — (15 b) : He knows 
himself surely — ( a classification of inference by a self ex- 
perience generally same to this) ; He said so anyway — (a 
recognition of that in "so" by testimony and a general compre- 
hension of that the "so" in general experience; etc of all say- 
so) : You do that right away — (a recognition of you do and 
that in it and the time by a general experience of the like in 
knowledge before; etc of all dictation) : You had better do it 
and be done about it — (recognition perfactoral word as con- 
joined all through it by a general experience comprehend of 
such; etc of all advice) : Will you, or will you not — (ditto, 
etc of all question ask approve deny like dislike condemn etc) : 
Papa does it — (example general and particular of expression, 
and implication) : How do most people get their campaign po- 
liticals — (a promptu to an answer general to all such compre- 
hensions particular, and here as these words express by an 
information comprehended in its factors to general experience) ; 
from the newspapers last, politicians second, and Wall Street 
first — (a general per their factors to it all in general com- 
prehension promptu of information and a general experience 
of that in the meaning of the words so conjoined) : I don't 
approve it, and he does — (an identification of something not ap- 
proved within, and a recognition of the opposite in another by 
inference or say-so and a general comprehension coalese (9) 
of it all in general experience) : I see John and a man com- 
ing yonder — (a sensation of John identified, and a man classi- 
fied and a coming and yonder also classified by a general ex- 
perience of the like before) : and how does Wall Street secure 
leading intelligence to their interests of sort — by the any how 
making of such conservatively or hopefully comfortable to lead- 
ers of intelligence — (a cause recognized by a general compre- 
hension of these words such as their conjunctions and modifica- 

30 



tions of each other to this their conjoined meaning makes of 
them,- and not that of other applications of the words to other 
meaning — 13,*) : The signs of such, are plainly in sight — (cer- 
tain signs particular recognized (15) in sight) : A most pleas- 
ing of all things; very satisfactory; wanted badly; justly pos- 
sible; beautiful etc of all things classed a sort of emotion — 
11 5) : I am listening but she isn't — (recognized attention) : 
rough hilly and unpleasant the road — (three classifications in 
recognitions such) : etc of any thing coming into mind at ran- 
dam or systematic, [z All assertions about mental sensations 
of external and internal recipiencies to knowledge within one's 
self (7**), are of particulars (general or particular of sub- 
stance in themselves within) remembering ly placed, in word to 
information of others : — see our recognitions of this in others 
expressed (sayso) sensations such,- by our own remembrances 
of the like in our apprehension self. Knowledge then of external 
object or feeling within one's self, is observatory] and knowl- 
edge same of others apprehensions direct or indirect to them, 
ever of articulate expression (say-so),- true or untrue — (7 b, c, 
11 A x z) : — see slip of deception and delusion (7 c) in say-so 
here outside their appearing doitive (11 A x z) and testimonial 
implications (10 m, x z) inexposecl or smoothered out in sophis- 
try of interest or authority denned — (65) : Also see impressive 
influences of imposing and importanizing appearince do say 
have and are on stareing credulousness — isee do and say here 
conceit and submit of prominent or display-of -crowd do and 
allegation dictation question advice praise flattery approve etc 
deceive and delude of people, [z z Of classificatory recognition 
(15) of an individual or class (9*, 11d) part or whole of species 
into their greater wholes (7^^)-, see all words or number 
(letters also,- 9 M z) recognized by general apprehension (mem- 
ory quite) of such in definite to indefinite remembrance, and 
clearness to confusion of their meanings to thing a correspond- 
ence to clear or confuse apprehensions abstractly same: also 
their meanings shown to each other after conjunction in names 
(12) and propositions (13) clear to incomprehensible of con- 
struction, or inability to comprehend them — a no remembrance 
of word or meaning in itself or its any conjunction of name or 
proposition impressing itself a negative of comprehension,- by 
remembrance of such gone or never there]. 



•I To an impressive and accurate comprehension of com- 
pounded subjects or adjectives in speech or writing, (com- 
pounded of expression to obviate repetition (1 n @) and mon- 
otony)-, sever out each subject or adjective of the compound 
and carefully run it through the predicate or leader — (other- 
wise join them all in written proposition) : — this not only 
brings out the subjects or adjective in their individuality but 
reenforces the impressiveness of all of them in memory, and 
severs or no of a compound verb or leader the verbs or lead- 
ers that belong or no to an any part or parts of the subject 
or adjective distinctly to themselves — thus in above example 

31 



(subjective here)-, "a fine jugglery of words or attention," 
divides off the subjects much literature and oratory to words, 
and courtesy (finer) to attention; while "admiration praise fa- 
vor or patronage," are all of them in the motives of much lit- 
erature oratory or courtesy alike. [Note this in the all more 
important compound subjects throughout this book; and for 
the reverse, analyze a subject, and subject the parts to the 
predicate attendant, and keep in mind of all occasions the sub- 
divisions here (1-6) of Thing and Attribute] 



COMPARISON DEMONSTRATION AND SENSE. 

9 Comparison, is the any putting or coming together to 
apprehension an any real remembered or conceived thing or 
attribute with same or other real remembered or conceived 
thing or attribute particular or general an any act of classi- 
fication identification or discrimination in perception conception 
or both *. 

x The terms to comparison coalese (8 nn) of identifica- 
tion and classification, and apart of discrimination (15 A, 15 B, 
15 c), are of identification a that whole or part of a nervously 
received object a subject or leader and that of a predicate or 
other expression of thought as indiscriminately same in appre- 
apprehension; or that of a reality or thought present, and that 
of a remembrance conception or reality of it past concertly 
pushed into mind by it as discriminately same: of classification, 
a that an individual or class a portion presented, and that a 
general remembrance of the like to such or others resembling to 
a classing of them together: of discrimination, a that of two or 
more somethings or attributes concertly together in apprehen- 
sion to any particular or general distinction whatever. [Of 
identifications in class-, see expressions "of a same kind or 
amount] . 



* Perception in general, is only such a portion of the any 
or more species of collected individuals as those that have coal- 
esced in general memory; and conception in general, the any 
unsensed portion of the any one or more species (past present or 
future) represented in mind by the perceived portion; and alto- 
gether the whole species or collection of species : — of general 
prception-, exampled in the general experience of all crows seen 
as always of a black color; and of general conception-, exampled 
in the ideation of all unseen crows as always of a black color; 
and all coalesced in the general remembrance and conception of 
all crows ( past present and future) as always of a black color. 
[Conception past present and future, and perception past and 
present, constitute the all of kind or amount]. 

32 



m Of comparison in its direct forms-, exampled as fol- 
lows: — Those two there (sensation), are, are not, or maybe 
are or are not (as the case may be) quite alike different or 
similar in form; This one on this side, is, is not, or maybe is 
or is not the larger smaller darker rounder smoother or harder 
of the two — (terms of comparison particular in positive nega- 
tive or indeterminate sensation) : These right here, and those 
others we saw yesterday, are, are not, or maybe are or are not 
same like or resembling of each other,- as the case may be; 
That one there is (is not or maybe is or is not) the bigger 
rounder darker harder longer or shorter (as the case may be) 
than the one we saw at the other place — (terms of comparison 
particular in sensation and memory) : That out there is not a 
same kind at all — (terms particularl of sensation and remem- 
brance general of a kind) what; eight and fourteen, differ in the 
amount of six; three plus four multiplied by five minus three 
divided by eight equal four — (terms memory of those amounts 
against each other in equasion) : That quite corresponds with 
my understanding of what is said of it in general — (particu- 
lar and general apprehension) : my remembrances of such 
since partially agree with my conceptions of them before only; 
my conceptions of such prior to that time do not correspond 
with my remerbrances of them since — (remembrance of a con- 
ception and a remembrance of the real since the terms) : your 
conceptions of that subject, disagree widely with that of my 
own about it — (conception of anothers conception, and my own 
conception, the terms of comparison) : That conception of 
yours, is a novel one to "me — (conception of another's concep- 
tion, and a sensation of the negative of such ever in mind, the 
terms) : It has passed wholly out of my mind — (a something 
conceived and its negation to mind the terms) : My pain now, 
is greater than it was yesterday — (a sensation and remem- 
brance particular, the terms) : I am enjoying this trip much 
better than the other one — (sensation and closely present re- 
membrance, and a preceding remembrance other, the terms) : 
Our plasures and our pains are of many kinds and intensity — 
(general apprehension widely blended of pleasures and pains of 
experience and an apprehension of them as kind and amount) : 
"Pleasures are like the poppy spread, you seize the flower the 
bloom is shed; or like the snow falls on the river, one moment 
white then gone forever" — (thought of the feeling of pleasure 
widely general, and thought of the poppy, etc, and snow faling 
on the river etc, the terms of comparison) : z These are the let- 
ters A, B, C,- etc, numbers 1, 2, 3, etc, and the words man, white, 



love, of, etc. — (comparison recognition of the letters A. B. C. 
1, 2, 3, man, white, love, of, etc. successively in sensation and 
a general memory of their like in other experiences (8 n n z z), 
the terms of comparison — no recognition-, a blank) : just nine 
o'clock now; now midnight — (particulars and general mem- 
ories of such in name, the terms) : — for other comparison-, see 
indiscriminate comparisons of a predicate with its subject in all 
expression and sense with succeeding sense to comparative in 
chances prefiixes and suffixes with their roots or words juxta- 
pose of succession. 

For examples to indirect comparison in kind or amount, find 
particulars to following axiom: — Things forms qualities dis- 
tances directions lengths breadths thickness times weights en- 
ergies velocities coincidences incoincidences or numbers, alike 
unlike or resembling a some same or like thing or attribute 
apart or whatever way combined, are alike different or resem- 
blance of the terms and intermediates compared. 

x For examples of direct or indirect or direct and indirect 
comparison-, find particulars to following axiom: — "Same like 
unlike or resmbling things or attributes as wholes or parts 
(first term here in thought) varied within, disjoined or joined 
or disjoined and joined, or produced anew (second term in 
thought) , produces varied or new sameness likeness difference 
or resemblance in things as resultant term or terms varied or 
produced anew." [Any varied or newly produced term or terms 
simple, or of equasion of inequality in their factoring to varia- 
tion or production anew, are made up by simple addition sim- 
ple subtraction multiplication or division apart or whatever way 
combined — division, a short method of finding and subtract- 
ing from a dividend as many like numbers but one as there are 
units in the divisor; and multiplication, a short method of 
joining as many numbers same and like the multiplicand as 
there are units in the multiplier. An equasion, is but a couplet 
of terms whose ratio is unity,- and difference nothing]. 

10 Demonstration, is proof or disproof of that a some 
positive negative or indeterminate inference of something or 
attribute unsensed,- by a sorne positive negative or indetermin- 
ate consciousness of it direct or mediate an any sensation after- 
ward, or verification of it in a some sense of necessity experi- 
ence or verified say-so. 

m Proof or disproof by sensation, a verification of a 
some determinately or indeterminately believed or disbelieved 
something or attribute by a some positive negative or indeter- 

34 



minate seeing hearing feeling tasting or smelling direct or 
indirect of it (9 ra, a) afterwards <I <I : proof or disproof by- 
necessity, a verification by the inference reflectively lying in a 
some unquestionable sense of necessity; proof or disproof by- 
experience, a verification by a no-exception of the conclusion in 
an invariable phenomena, or ascertained portion definite or in- 
definite a variable phenomena — (crucial) ; proof or disproof of 
authority, is verification by crucial or insulate testimony or 
circumstance positive or negative an alleged phenomena connect 
or disconnect with other: — therefore all influences of sort 
(speculative physical historical political business medical etc.) 
that cannot be brought into a sense of necessity experience or 
verified say-so, are so far untrue or indeterminate beliefs or 
disbeliefs. [Hence doctrines of idealism theism nebular hypoth- 
esis, wave theory of sound and light (a surface phenomena 
only), and thousands of other notions demonstrably untrue by 
exclusion a premises of necessity or experience, or indemonstra- 
ble for want of a severence of them from other mingled phe- 
nomena. See most political questions of our day yet indemon- 
strable or untrue, and many important trials where the evi- 
dence is made uncertain by bribery interest friendship or hatred 
— evidence of value, should be critically intelligent or insulately 
corroborative. In all evidence where the parties are interested, 
corroboration of slight degree, or connivance of parties ap- 
parent-, the judgment should be cautious or indeterminate. For 
judgments hasty perverted or prejudice of evidence-, see news- 
paper conversational and other offhanded allegations of sort, 
resting on exparte exaggerated depreciated selected ignored su .'- 
pressed or careless information fit of sentiment interest hate 
whim or negligence, and national partisan corporate medical 
personal or other. Of practice with variable phenomena-, that 
that experience dictates the probable or more probable of any 
stage of chances, should be followed *; and in all over cost do- 
ing in chance return (see most insurance gambling loan etc.) 
success in life avoids them above other success; vice versa, 
business failure. In mathematics-, addition subtraction multi- 
plication and division in all their particulars, rest fundamen- 
tally on memory of factors alone — hence not necessary, but 
limitedly seen to be invariable truths absolute of their correct 
manipulation of factors in computation. Demonstration inde- 
terminate, is demonstration of a condition of things neither 
positive nor negative]. 

35 



* Of probability in proof (variable indegree) -, presump- 
tion, is confined to that oftener associated or disassociated than 
not in experience of the whole or portion of a phenomena cir- 
cumscribed (7c), and all other disconnected or obversely asso- 
ciated, excluded — hence refusal in court to answer, should be 
credited probable guilt or truth, and the credit such made its 
own punisher. Of conflict in variability to proof-, prominence 
should be given to that less variable, and the other held in abey- 
ance — (prominence (7 b, c) here alone not proof x) : — see the 
unusual here made paramount to the usual in abuse of law,- by 
great noise distract, and suspicion or bar of testimony in the 
accused — "Bar dell versus Pickwick" for illustration. Of ac- 
cusation and proof, the grounds of suspicion or proof rest upon 
testimony and circumstance variably possible to the probable: 
of the same ( (accusation) to cover of something within them- 
selves or others motively connected, an exaggeration suppres- 
sion or falsity favorable to them is a probable motive. Also 
of interested defence-, testimony such is greatly to lessly a 
probability of some to more exaggeration suppression or falsi- 
fication suitable their motives and graveness of the charge and 
character of the witness: — hence natural suspicion of such tes- 
timony, and reliance on it when casually against themselves-, 
in that the motive before is dissolved. Of testimony self con- 
victory in part-, if the testimony such can be critically connected 
with other favoring evidence under suspicion and all its con- 
nections-, all such must be taken as substantiated until other 
better is brought to proof. [Of criminal or fraudulent accusa- 
tion-, the principal should be compelled to testify, and his testi- 
mony critically sifted; and upon refusal such whole or part, 
should be accounted guilt or truth so for against him. Of ac- 
cumulative testimony for or against an accusation or allega- 
tion-, the testimony should be critically insulate to an origin 
same — (little attended to in our courts past and present) : and 
of disconnected testimony-, a connection must be shown to exist 
or have existed — hence the "material" and "immaterial" of 
pleading. See Evidence Ency Britt or other) . 

x Of proof or disproof of that resting on authority (as 
transmitted record or word of mouth)-, the test of a statement 
or interpretation, is by a some affirmation or negation of the 
assertion or implication in an any direct or indirect perception 
of the facts same afterwards, or an any some insulated coinci- 
dence or incoincidence with nature or other testimony same in 
origin: — corroboration thus an any some most practicable elim- 
ination of all concomitant exaggerations depreciations fabrica- 
tions and unnaturalisms of sort distort of truth, and an appro- 
priation of all implications of sign by a some reasonableness of 
excluding or including necessity experience or testimony. Cor- 
roboration by insulate testimony or circumstance same in origin, 
a quite necessary evaluation of the truthful portion positive or 
negative a whatever phenomena,- by barring the possibility of 
an intrusion of untruthfulness — a single corroboration thus an 
impossibility quite for error. Trust of an unverified authority, 
is a reliance founded on an uncritical or overtrusting sense of 
36 



the veracity of men in everyday experience, and absence of quite 
an any sense of sagacity or insagacity (7 c &) of men an 
enhancement or depreciation of the value of veracity. [Insulate 
corroboration, a some unlooked for or unintended coincidence or 
incoincidence natural or testimonial, and evaluation of chance a 
possible. See See Aberlands method of correcting authority true 
as a method, but defective in the then logical instrument of his 
time — Ency Britt. Insulate evidence direct of an any phenom- 
ena, also evidence of that having a some crucial connection or 
disconnection with it, and cumulate or isolate of other direct or 
indirect evidence. In testimony-, see additions or subtractions 
to sensation and remembrance portion a phenomena by their ad- 
mixtures with conception (11 B x) , and their exposed or inex- 
posed correctness or incorrectness incident of other testimony 
or circumstance. [Of testimony then-, the first to obtain from 
it, is how much of it rests in sensation,- by crucial knowledge of 
the object in general experience or sense of necessity, and fail- 
ure of that in any part, an insulate testimony or circumstance 
otherwise disclosed followed out in all its connections critical, 
and connect or disconnect with the thing in question: — hence 
testimony or other probability or prominence insulato of other 
testimony or circumstance, is not proof of a particular,- in that 
a particular lies anywhere through the probable to the possible 
containing the whole species of particulars a general value ab- 
solute of general apprehension only — 7 b, c, *. Proof by prob- 
ability or prominence, a probability or prominence and circum- 
stance or other probabilities or prominences that conjoined 
amount to an invariable or a necessity for the time being a cir- 
cumscription least — quite this, of "beyond a reasonab]e doubt". 
General moral character (deed and word), and interest or dis- 
interest and friendliness and unfriendliness, an enhancement or 
depreciation of testimony in general estimate — 8 n n z. 

^ fl The implication of perception here with other ele- 
ments of demonstration, and consequent exclusion of the old de- 
ductive notions of geometrical demonstration often very un- 
natural and forf etched (see Euclids Forty Seventh Proposition) 
obviates the difficulties of the old mathematical theory of deduc- 
tion felt wrong somehow by many critical minds ancient and 
modern ^ [Apprehensions of mathematical or other generals in 
principle, are by perceptions value an any some variable invaria- 
ble or necessary relations between individual portions compared, 
and a general judgment of these and all others like them as 
necessarily or experimentally same in value — hence demonstra- 
tions of geometry, are not deductions but judgments of sort 
formed by comparison of particulars in perceptive examples, 
and an induction of such so in all the individuals composing the 
species $$. 



*I "Ptolemy x x x when visiting the philosophers in their 
schools [Alexandria], asked Euclid if he could not show him a 
shorter and easier way to the higher truths of mathematics than 
that by which he led his pupils in the museum". [Sharps Egypt. 
See Mathematical Axioms Stewart on the Mind]. 

37 



tt Natural proof in Euclids Forty Seventh Proposition, is 
by computation of little squares equal in the sides and hypotenuse 
squared, and a following inference that all such are invariably 
so — a feeling of necessity herein this demonstration, is not ap- 
parent at all, but experimental only. Failure of any one or 
more particulars to coincide with the judgment in general, is 
the reducto ad absudum of disproof: hunt for them a short 
method of verification. Problems in geometry, are but methods 
of producing diagrams in particular, and estimating their values 
in part by particular comparisons of part with other values 
before, or other term or terms immediate: — see in Euclids First 
Proposition-, the lines CAB, are seen to be equal by the three 
lines coalesced and conjoined radii equal per other estimate of 
the radii of an any number of such circles equal: also in Prop- 
osition Two-, the lines D G and D L two equal radii minus D B 
and D A equal (a particular), are known equal by necessity of 
equality in the terms shortened equally, and same as that that 
proves all the instances axiom in "equals taken from equals the 
remainders are equal" — hence equality here is not deduced from 
the axioms referred to, but is involved immediately in equal radii 
whole or shortened equally in particular: again in Proposition 
Four atheorem-, the two triangles there alleged equal, are proven 
so by coincidence of the two in comprehension just as the axiom 
referred to itself is in all instances proven: — no deduction what- 
ever taking place,- in that the judgment of equality instanced, 
is not forced into mind by thought of an axiom of equality, but 
by coincidence of the particular terms compared — determining 
factors of a term illustrated in arcs of a same length and radii 
proving cords equal,- by the terminals of the arcs same terminal 
points of the cord cut off in a same distance to length. Axioms 
and theorems alike, are demonstrated by certain coincidences or 
incoincidences of the terms in particular, and a feeling of obso- 
luteness or other certainty in all such instances conceived of the 
axiomatic or theoremic species induced secondarily on the pre- 
mised particulars. 

11a. .Apprehension (perception conception or both), is 
positive negative or indeterminate recognition or discrimina- 
tion of thing or attribute by coalesce or juxtapose comparison 
of them in nervous recipiency. [11a * z, 3 x~\. 

M Perception, ever confined to a some classificatory (15) 
identitive (15b) or distinctive (15c) sensation or memory of 
object definitely or indefinitely present or absent to sensation or 
its duplicate memory, and conception to a some ideation of thing 
or attribute plainly or hazily come to mind by a some memory 
of its like or resemblance in former sensation: — conception pro- 
long or short to that of sensation, made up of extensions or 
diminutions of a perceived thing or attribute factor or greater 
to a more or less vivid or hazy whole beyond or beneath an any 
area of actual sensation — see conception of great distances times 
or extensions planetary or stellar, and conception of molecules 

38 



and atoms within sensible thing. [Sensation remembrance and 
conception as feelings of sensation mental, are discriminated of 
each other in that the objects of sense are always present or 
absent a some present sense to an any some act of sensation, 
rememberingly present or absent a some past to an any act of 
remembrance, and imaginately present or absent a some past 
present' or future to an any act of conception. Memory and 
conception however often confused in thought by intrusions of 
conception in lieu of memory its representative in apprehension. 
All knowledge thus, divisible into two portions,- the perceptive 
and conceptive whole in species — the perceived portion general 
(9 *), often a premise to a conceived portion inferred — 12c. 
Sensation, a first meet of mind and nature, and remembrance a 
saving of this to recognition or discrimination of understood 
sensation after, or to a conception of that never yet in sensa- 
tion. [8 *, Remembrance and conception here, a mental pic- 
ture of something or attribute incident of internal nervous im- 
pulse or symbol] 

x Sensation and remembrance (experience), ever particu- 
lar of instance, and general of all the instances portion the 
species (9 *) single or collect in name. General Memory iden- 
tification general of experience), a variable vivid to indefinite 
(hazy) blend conce?'t an any all impressing sensations (few to 
many) dropped out of particular memory — (trifles of life 
made up in their sums) * : — see ideas permanent and facts 
fleeting of the Greeks **I, and note all word abstractly a name 
of this general experience prehistorically elaborate, z Sensate 
portion of knowledge, a phenomena often sign of other portions 
experiencedly or necessarily absent screened sequent or trans- 
cendental (58) to sensation filled in by definite or indefinite in- 
ference: — for instance-, death by poison follows the introduction 
of poison into the stomach or blood, and is concomitant of certain 
changes of cellular structure or function the immediate cause of 
death — (here the introduction of poison into the stomach or 
blood a perceptive phenomena, becomes sign of death often to 
follow; and death often sign of poison remote, and certain 
changes cellular and molecular the immediate cause of death) : 
also see tick of a watch sign of its running; bodily or facial 
expression or do sign of character emotion thought volition 
health disease pleasure or pain : touch of a portion sign of other 
portion or portions; and taste or smell sign of edibility or putri- 
faction: also effect a sign of a cause, and all indications of sort 
to courage fear, good or bad nature, safety danger friendship 
sleep tiresomeness plethora storm rain, change of weather, snow 
frost winter, poverty wealth strength weakness etc. 



* Note here quite instantaneous indefiniteness of sensa- 
tional particulars in the sane, and their entire loss, in the insane 
and other animals (14 *), and retention of prior experiences 
general or often of thought to recognition of the instances thus 

39 



so soonly diming or dropping out of memory. Insanity medical, 
an incorrectable mistaking of things in particular imagination 
for facts, and their quite immediate forgetfulness of that just in 
mind — (an intellectual living of the moment by disconnection 
from the particular past) : — see here all that general of past ex- 
perience to recognitions of thing (15) continuing, and the recog- 
nitions particular ephemeral — lucid intervals of the insane mixed 
in. & Also akin to this-, see dream and delusion a periodic or 
remaining insanity (falsity taken for fact) abberate of sleep or 
training, credulousness, assumptive reasoning, whim interest or 
passion apart or whatever may combined. See of brainal ail- 
ment delirium an insanity abberate of natural intelligence emo- 
tion will and do. [11 B x. See here also errors of dream partic- 
ular, and recognition of their objects natural: also delusions 
general of sentiment, and particular of an any application par- 
ticular of that a positive or negative suit or unsuit of something 
to their prepossessed (15 n n) sentiments. Of animal intelli- 
gence and emotion-, see memory or unconscious nervousness gen- 
eliminate of food water shelter procreation parentality play or 
eliminate of food water spelter procreation parentality play or 
danger direct or infective, and the conscious particulars soon 
dropped out of memory particular — a living on the moment — 
and not an insanity, z Nervousriess, an associated function of 
unconscious nervous ganglia recipient and motor to variable 
afferencies of cellular impulse and motivities nervous and mus- 
cular to massive movement heat electricity magnetism and waste 
(24 A, 24 b) in bodily radiation heat or perspiration and evap- 
oration, and connect or no with apprehension motive and voli- 
tion superpose of it, and initiatory finish or both of the conscious 
when joined: — see conscious function pivoted in nervous recip- 
iency to know external and want internal (3 x, Hey), and voli- 
tionally disappear in nervous transfer and muscular acitivity 
etc, and nervous function pivoted on afferency ganglionic, and 
nervous motivity and muscular activity etc resultant. Cellular 
function nervously touch of this system (see termination of 
nerves) , a responder of heat electricity magnetism light sound 
pressure friction irritation or touch as the function may be, and 
an asmose of elements bathing it of liquid supply and waste to 
an any substitution addition loss division compound isomeration 
(25) electricity or magnetism within, and retention or expulsion 
or freeing of something (expulsive elasticity or discordant vibra- 
tion) to other function supply or elimination whole or part a 
digestive and arterial circulation of supply and waste — see direct 
and indirect appropriation and elimination here a concatenate 
function conjunctive an any system of subdivided cell life to 
growth repair or both; also special clusters of cell function col- 
lecting and preparing molecular supplies to embryonic and fur- 
ther growth variation and conservation systematic an any kind 
and change in development or decline successive — 16*, 59<j €||]. 



*q "When once his mind is made up [Nelson]-, he never 
travels over the ground again nor passes in review the process 
by which he arrived at a conviction". [Here usually inference 
true or false is greatly to lessly intruded in the judgment; but 



40 



n Conception then occurs of an any ideation (represen- 
tation) of unsensed thing or attribute (with or without infer- 
ence-, a judgment of acceptance or no) by a some priorly 
sensed thing form quality quantity place or time representative 
(7 m * z) of that never in sensation: — hence a good or bad 
conception comes of a well or ill trained mind in wide or nar- 
row experience (general memory), and symbolic or pictured 
representation of phenomena present and reconstructed of other 
time — hence the differing phenomena thoughts volitions doings 
symbols meaning etc. of the times of an author or translator 
and passions of the time to other times of doings and thought 
corruptingly creep into much of his word pictures of past action 
and thought he represents — hence our ideas of nation king city 
landscape citizen soldier manufacture transportation merchan- 
dise agriculture manners conversation worship sentiment etc, in 
which trebal communities or other antiquity are represented, are 
as wide of truth nearly as change of the times: also much an- 
cient religious belief (see Bible Ency-Britt) speculation history 
and letters, are now vitiated by apprehensions intermediate and 
present intruded into translation or interpretation — translation 
and interpretation at best, a translators or interpretatosr com- 
prehension good or bad only. [Of intrusions a present pro- 
jected into a past-, see Theocracy and State of the Jews after 
return from exile corruptingly projected into the Pentetuech 
(Ency-Britt) originately of Patriarchal kinship and structure: 
also New Testament and other theological concepts of thought 
projected into other thought of the past and taint of it. See 
Patriachism of Chaldiac and Egyptian blend four and more 
thousand years ago translated into English phenomena pure 
or quite in ch 25 v 15, ch 14, chap 36 v 15 Genesis: also Lord 
and God of Englo-European apprehension projected into a 
polytheistic faith and do guardedly clan an all trusting and 
ever unsuspecting childish worship. Of distinction between 
remembrance and conception above-, remembrance is a con- 
sciousness of that in mind as having at some time or times 
been a matter of sensation; conception, a consciousness of that 
in mind as never at any time having been a matter of sensa- 



of judgment continuing quite alone in remembrance-, the facts in 
particular, are greatly dropped out: — hence fact mingled with 
intrusion and omission historical oratorical conversational and 
other when judgments of the author are given without or greatly 
in lieu of the facts long or short of them]. 



41 



tion : their confusion with each other, a want of a clear discrim- 
ination at a time of sensation by uncritical attention same, or 
indiscrimination of such to correct knowledge when run to- 
gether. [See further Plato's Ideal Theory to History in Em- 
erson's Essays — mind a warehouse of spring-hinged generals in 
remembrance to touch of recognition or discrimination in com- 
parison — improved of continued and widened experience. Of 
discovery in art or nature-, the conception new is made up of 
experienced things changed in form or originally seen con- 
junctions or severences of them newly come to mind in genius, 
and corrected or improved of verification. Like remembrances-, 
conception may be the factors of comparison or constituents of 
judgment — of impetuous conception inferencial and without 
hunt for the facts a basis-, see individual conceit and swarm- 
eries of conceit about us in maddening and other opinions of 
common conversation, the pulpit, press and rostrum. See Pre- 
liminary here and Shooting Niagra of Carlyle — so persis- 
tently do most people rely on the friendly judgments of others 
without inquiry for the facts-, that to question theirs often gives 
offence or unloads the proof negatively on the questioner — no 
one thus should nationally be expected to receive the beliefs of 
another shorn or stint of the facts, and to intrude it, is presump- 
tive ignorance and an insult to critical intelligence. 

** Hence primitive conceptions of the Greek and other peo- 
ples physics and supernaturalism-, in the causes of natural phe- 
nomena represented by the spiritual powers of man projected 
into the physical @, and secondly a development of man socially 
into ruler intermediate and subject earthy of place, projected 
into an invisible heaven, earth, and recipient mind (**I) ethereal 
in personage, and greatly inapproachable other than through 
an organized priesthood remunterately intermediate; [Abrahamic 
(or democratic) worship, a prior system to the priesthood. De- 
velopment of man in patriarchism or chieftaincy attended 
adored dreaded and appeased, suggestive of divisions of nature 
(varied locally) under gods attendants etc that finally of kingly 
development became unified of unified chieftaincies into great 
gods, on a one supreme god. All as all power originally human 
like and secondly supernatural varied by calculating interests 
priestly or political or both, and intrusion invasive whimsic 
al or rational: — see local variations of Greek mythology in Hes- 
iod the Dramatists Herodotus Zenophon Polyphratus and other 
of Grote, and rationalizing Christianity versus modern conser- 
vatism. "In the semi-historical theory respecting Grecian myth- 
ical narratives [Grote]-, the critic unconsciously transports into 
the homeric times of thought those habits of classification and 
distinction standard of acceptance or rejection current of his 
own time *•][. Thus doctrines of later interpretation intruded 

42 



into ancient myths real to the masses, and symbolized to the 
learned. Myth of sort (Greek of Jew) founded on an inextrica- 
ble confusion of fact and fancy uncontaminated with an awak- 
ening criticism or foreign intrusion, a valuable representation 
of tribal and individual character and notion prehistorically pol- 
itical religious and social : criticism or invasion in turn, a second- 
ary basis representative of its time,- a development or substi- 
tution. Myth here being supernatural and natural conception 
only, and conception dependent for its factors on experience-, it 
follows that all mythical systems of antiquity necessarily include 
an actual experience substratum to it. [See Grotes Greece ch's 
16, 17: also persistency of others to project their notions into 
the past f> and to reflect the uncviilized by their own opinions 
the basis of others conception $: also Lubbocks origin of civiliza- 
tion ch's 1, 5. Also see this age our data to geology, and dif- 
ficulties same — 16 *]. 

@ "Do you think we have forces [spirits] by which we 
move ourselves and that the air [spiritually volitional] is left 
without the power of moving — Seneca. Natures horror of 
a vacuum come to us from antiquity, was undoubtedly from the 
notion of a volitional and feeling force to suction breathing cup- 
ping etc,- in which water air etc volitionally and horrifiedly 
rushed into the vacuum. [See Heriods Theagony and Diogenes 
of Appolonia: also of fact and expression-, see animate proper- 
ties still assumed to inanimate objects personified, and origin of 
the third gender. See also passivity of mind to extraneous 
causes volitional the ancient worship of "Soma" (Vedaic) ,- in 
the nervous feelings passive an intoxicating spirit extraneously 
volitional @*, and its confirmation thus of external powers to 
this and sober phenomena classified as deified and demon voli- 
tions to approved or unapproved doing; and secondly appealed to 
or thwarted of offering praise charm or incantation. Theology 
of nature worship, an explanation then of natural phenomena 
(supra then) in deified spirits the cause of them — of the vedas-, 
the earth (a spirit earth included) defined the mother and sus- 
tainer of being (no figure then), fire a deified spirit and mes- 
senger of disintegrating spirits to that the burning sacrifice, 
and dispeller of the demons of night and igniter of flame; the 
air, a spirit vague of a thousand spirit steeds (once horses spirits 
in the flesh), and storm a rushing deified troop of spirits with- 
out a whence or whither: the sky (a real blue solid something 
in primitive sense), an "Indra" ever in conflict with the cloud 
demon (a water thief within) as he pierces it with his thunder, 
bolt to spill of its stolen water in rain and a parching earthy 
thirst — note of nature an increased downpour of rain often im- 
mediate a sharp clap of thunder. For prognosis of deified or 
demonized influences to success or no of future events-, see in- 
terpretation of dreams, and astrology by the old Assyrians. See 
in the burning sacrifice nearly world over,- the primitive notion 
of fire the real carrier of mans spirit food sacrifice to his god : 
also likely the origin of the funeral pile in mans spirit dis- 
integrated and returned by fire to the upper world its originate 
location— all affections of nature by primitive man conceived to 
be of spiritual causes. See also the volitional prehistoric 
changed to figure in advanced notions succeeding.] 

43 



*<J "Thus having spoken-, the goddess infused a tender 
desire into his mind both of her former husband of her city 
and her parents" 

"If thou be very bold-, why doubtless a deity has given it 
thee". "Hear me oh my friends, a divine dream came to me in my 
sleep during the ambrosial night very like unto noble Nestor in 
form in statue and in mien" [Illiad. See this culminate in spir- 
itual causatious caucasion: also Empedocles of Evolution, and 
Arminianism Creation and Inspiration Ency Britt: also Gau- 
tamas tempter spiritually afferent, and his thoughts afferent 
spirits angelic of light or darkness — personified good and evil 
spirits recipient to volition. In Greek Mythology-, see the sun 
carried around underneath the blue vault of heaven in a spiritual 
chariot and spirit horses — spirits here and elsewhere, once in- 
habitants of material forms on earth. See these notions in the 
spirits of departed ancestors or friends still visiting their friends 
in dreams among the lower races of Africa and Polynesian 
Islands, and the burial of servants and domestic animals to fur- 
nish their souls with spiritual servants etc in their spirit world 
above them: also food placed on the graves of deceased friends 
that their spirit friends may partake of the spiritual essences 
supposed to be within the offerings displayed. Fetish or idol, 
but an artificial abode for a some attending or averting spirit. 
See image (water etc) and shadow interpreted spiritual doubles 
to thing, and spirit world of Prof Taylors Anthropology]. 

t "He [Caedman] who sang the warfare of Hebrew patri- 
archs with the true ring of teutonic battle song" for a test of all 
this-, have a short article (or this section) English translated 
into another language, and this again translated back into En- 
glish by another translator insulate of the first English; and 
this again into still another language by another translator in- 
sulate , and then insulately back again into English in other 
insulation. 

t "But men foolishly think that gods are born as men are, 
and have too a dress like their own, and their voice and figure." 
"The Ethiopians represent their gods with flat noses and black 
complexion; while the Thracians, give to theirs blue eyes and 
rudy complexions." "Such things of the gods are related by 
Homer and Hesiod as would be a shame and abiding disgrace to 
any of mankind — promises broken and thefts, and the one de- 
ceiving the other" — Zenophanes. [Hence of Ingersol-, "An hon- 
est god, is thenoblest work of man;" and of Emerson-, "Every 
man is a divinity in disguise — a god playing the fool"]. 

*<| "He [Zenotus] is also known as the first of those Alex- 
andrian critics who turned their thoughts towards mending the 
text of Homer xxx which had become faulty through carelessness 
of the copiers. Zenotus was soon followed by others in this task 
of editing Homer: but their labors were not approved by all, 
and when Aratus asked Simon which he thought the best edition 
of the poet-, shrewdly added "That which has been least correct- 
ed." [Sharpes Hist of Egypt.] 

44 



n Conception itself an ideation of something or attribute 
never in sensation, and concomitant a some positive negative or 
indetermined inference of sort accompanying it-, exampled as 
follows: — I will write you soon; I might have written you be- 
fore — (conception by memory of writing letters) ; There may 
have been such prior to my time of knowing; They describe it 
cylindrical tall and out of plumb — (the latter made of remem- 
brances of thing cylindrical, tall, and out of plumb) ; "All are 
but parts of one stupenduous whole, whose body nature is, and 
God the soul" — (the universal represented by our memory gen- 
eral of the firmament above us, the earth beneath us, and soul 
within us) ; Professor Tyndals residence is situated in London 
England — (by many, a conceived residence made up of our local 
memories indefinite of resident houses for his residence, streets 
buildings rumbling wagons etc for London, and our own di- 
visions of land rivers farms towns vilages etc for England <I : 
It will be like this one to a dot; can you make one like this; 
How beautiful it will be; The fashions of that day, are now 
curiously illustrated in this old picture magazine of long ago; 
How many miles to the moon; What is the pressure of air on 
Mount Blanc; are all races unlike each other; and John then 
really resembles the man you spoke of. "And Maggie when 
she read about Christiana passing the river over which there 
was no bridge-, always saw the Floss between the green pastures 
of the great ash". [The Mill on the Floss]. 



*3 To a native of interior Africa-, London could not be 
conceived otherthan an immense kraal of African explorers cows 
and clabber; and the country England, his own interior Africa 
ruled by a great chief: with the wild Indian here-, London 
would only be a big trading post of knives hatchets red calico 
etc ; and England a grassy plain and deer with streams of water 
and scanty wood lining its banks; To many a native Mexican-, 
London would be a big adobe village extending over a grassy 
plain of desert ground and irrigated spots of sort, and England, 
an immense plain of bunch grass, sheep cattle, and irrigated 
meadows here and there. To not a few planter infected South- 
erners South, London would appear a large county seat town of 
cotton gins, cotton yards, blacksmith shops, hip roof school 
houses, proslavery churches etc, and England his own horizon 
of cotton field agriculture, shackhouse tenantry, country store 
merchandise etc, and a good old Secession Democracy holding 
down the power. [Appendix C] 

45 



n n Necessary conception, exampled in all masses and ele- 
ments of matter and force as ever posited in a some absolute 
distance direction, amount of force, and intensity of movement 
or equilibrium*. 

Of experimental conception-, exampled of all unsensed 
things or their attributes represented in mind by some specific 
or wider general or particular experience of their like plainly 
or hazily called up in memory of an any instance or instances 
of conception: — for examples of such,- take notice of what 
comes into mind by description of strange places, events, or 
something to do or not do of contemplation. 

11b Notion, is positive negative or indeterminate belief 
or volition of sort about a some unsensed thing or attribute' 
rationally coincident or irrationally incoincident a some abso- 
lute necessity invariability or varibility of such in actual 
phenomena. 

M Notion occurs of an any inference or volition about 
some unsensated thing or attribute formulated of natural or 
prepared conditions of mind in incident forces of rational or 
irrational reflection information precedent example dictation 
petition praise derision denunciation, deferencial display, dig- 
nitary reserve, familiarity deference or other influences affer- 
ently within or without: — hence power of common speech ora- 
tory news and example in the formation and conservation of 
notions of sort (as sentiments of thought and determinations 
of conduct) in the minds of men: — of the present at least-, as 
common-sense beliefs and volitions of sort often quite smoth- 
ered or ignored by opposing irrational like dislike and interest 
systematically infused into the multitude $$ — correct judgment 
and conduct about things of little or no personal experience, as 
yet of little development in the minds of men follower and 
leader. 

$$ In the absence of personal experience or other inabil- 
ity-, belief disbelief and behavior resting upon an irrational and 
interested authority, has its foundation in a some proffered 
gratification and want systematically infused into the young and 
old of a whatever commonality, and their inability to discrim- 
inate between what an authority teaches that is demonstrable, 
what indemonstrable, and what questionable — (and with most 
people, an inability to even suspect that there is an any such a 



* The reader is here challenged to suggest another funda- 
mental condition of thing than this — hence a necessary truth, 
and the modus aperandi of all nature in her ever persistent ex- 
ercise of unequal to equal forces, movement and equilibrium ad 
infinitum. [19, 20, 7 m &&.~\ 



46 



difference in what they receive by authority) : — hence power of 
authority in the systematic training of the young, and conserva- 
tion of the old in iterate beliefs and behavior that have by any 
changes of fortune £ gotten a hold and kept a hold on a com- 
munity of people 1 1 . 

x Then all rational or irrational belief or volition positive 
negative or indeterminate of thought or conduct, constitutes no- 
tion: ideation of unsensed thing or attribute by definite or in- 
definite perception of some other thing or attribute, constitutes 
conception or imagination; perception conception or both, con- 
stitute apprehension,- or sense; remembrance conception or both, 
constitute thought,- or idea. [Conception or imagination same-, 
divisible into conception or imagination true or untrue to fact: 
sensation memory or conception devoid of false imagination, is 
ever true to fact — one sanity, the other insanity-, (not sane) , and 
varying one to the other in differing persons or times.] 

y In perception of thing or attribute (a concert of causes 
and effects,- 3a;)-, the objects of sense afferent of brain and 
body, are the causes, and apprehension the effect; so of infer- 
ence, objects of conceived thing or attribute afferent a some 
sense of necessity experience or authority, are cause, and belief 
disbelief or neither the effect: again of motivity-, objects mo- 
tive, are cause and volition or no effect; and volition inits turn, 
is cause and do of sort effect; and muscular effort of sort, is 
is cause, and bodily or conjoined movement or equilibrim (mas- 
sive or molecular), is effect: — note bodily action on self or exter- 
nal things about, and effects of speech or writing on mind to 
thought — this section, an example right here. 



£ The Mohametan religion, once hung on the point of an 
Arabian lance; and the fate of Christendom once trembled a 
whole day on the ensigns of a Charles Martel: Had Martin 
Luthers safe conduct to the council of worms been violated, Pro- 
testantism of today would have been a different Protestantism. 
Had there been no Henry the VIII-, there would not have been 
an established church of England as it there exists today: A 
centipede in Napoleans cradel, could have changed the map of 
Europe, the history of the world; placed diadems upon the heads 
of others, and held up Lord Wellington against his laurels. 

The primary motive mostly to continuation of organized 
belief and conduct-, is pay notoriety and agreeable effort in the 
leaders; yhile opposing disbelief and conduct without other belief, 
remains greatly unorganized by lack of money and popularity in 
such enterprise; on the other hand-, organized belief flatters a 
some want infused into the multitude; and opposing disbelief, 
destroys the hope of that want — many men purchase hope, but 
none buy despair. [In belief or disbelief of conduct-, a falsehood 
veiled in wilful or unwilful deceit, is same as truth to motives of 
action or restraint — therefore a lie, an error, or a truth (apart 
or whatever way combined) inferred true, is all the same to mo- 
tive] . 

47 



Of determinate notion in necessity-, exampled in the belief 
of an eternal duration of matter and force in ultimate factor; 
belief of an eternal duration of movement or rest in matter; 
belief in the impossibility of a division or suppression of matter 
force or space to a no matter, no force, or no space; belief that 
something: can't come from nothing, nor go to nothing. 

Of determinate notion in invariability-, exampled of the 
belief of a continued formation and dissolution of aggregate 
matter and force physical and organic; belief that matter 
loosened of an any interception in gravity, will fall to other 
interception; belief that no two or more individuals alike, are 
of closer scrutiny without a some noticeable or measurable dif- 
ference ; belief that a greater force will always overcome a lesser 
force in opposition; belief in all other things premised without 
exception in a complete experience. 

Of determinate notion in variability-, exampled in that of 
an any some particularized uncertainties from the quite certain 
to the very rare of occurrence. 

Of notions indeterminte-, exampled in the assertions that 
poverty and crime, may or may not be connected as cause and 
effect: That disbelief in religious teachings, may or may not 
be the cause of increased crime: That high protection tariffs 
or free trade may or may not be cause of a greater national 
welfare; that universal suffrage, may or may not be the safer 
or most economical form of government: etc etc of all inde- 
terminateness rational. 

Of conditional notion in indeterminate belief or disbelief-, 
exampled as follows: If the Koran comes of God-, Mahomet is 
the prophet of God; if the Koran does not certainly come from 
God-, Mahomet may or may not be the prophet of God. 

Of notion determinate or indeterminate of conduct-, exam- 
pled as follows: — "I'm a notion to go tomorrow; John has at 
last made up his mind to trade; His notion about it is that we 
had better not delay the matter longer; "I'm not in the notion 
at all"; His notions, are very wavering about it, and can't say 
that my own about it are very determinate either; etc of all 
determinate or indeterminate conditions of mind to do or not 
do. 

Of notions resting wholly or mostly on authority-, exam- 
pled in the specific doctrines of feticism, mythology creation 
prophetism incarnation trinity revelation universal suffrage 

48 



"liberty" partisan tariff free trade monumentalism, wave theory 
of light, nebular hypothesis, allopathy homeopathy, faith cure, 
charm incantation witches ghosts, influences of the moon, signs 
of good or bad luck, theosophical or seance lore, and thousands 
of other notions that have of the forgotten or remembered got- 
ten a hold on slumbering ignorance and inane credulity. 

n Of notions volitional, and subject of authority-, exam- 
pled of all volitional conduct in submission to inquiry reference or 
example of others: — all actions of men then outside of experi- 
ence whi mor genius, are by influences of others feared or de- 
fered in our submissions inquiry references or exemplar doings. 
[For enslaved notion-, see subjections of dogmatism and other 
arbitrary power; influence of parents over children, one person 
over another, and manners customs and dress imitatively in- 
fective of fad or stabler fashion: — all of value or no as sagacity 
or happen of an authority domineer an any means to an end, 
or the good or bad effects of examples set to influence of 
others. Of notion infused, or whimsical aberrations of think 
and do individually or systematically ineconomic to balanced 
life-, see much fussy preparation to remote or silly possibilities 
of occurrence, and great visionary stress of do or have of thing 
enthusiastically looked to and acted on to return of great values 
— note under this unsuspecting enthusiasm of the masses for 
benefits indefinitely expected or ills avoided through partisan 
suffrage, and persistent investments of many to skin games or 
abortive commodities afferent a journalistic or other agency. 
For other aberrations of mind-, see notions no wrong in faction 
espoused, and notions no good in factions opposed : also many 
foolish notions of think, and do in every-day life: — see crankiness 
here, and all off-handed-know-it-all-positiveness, and the ever 
hectoring tyranny of everlasting correction : also most peoples 
ever sure enough notion of that always best of do and should 
do in self and others, and failures to successes of men by their 
faulty notions in every day business. [For illustration of every 
day notion good to bad, watch attentively public and private 
opinions recommends or do, and critically test their judgments 
and volitions same to their any degrees of truthfulness or un- 
truthfulness to fact, and economy or ineconomy, efficiency or 
inefficiency, essentiality or inessentiality, and equity or inequity 
of notion to do. [40 *, 41 C, 33]. 

lie Inference is the any formation of a some positive 
negative or indeterminate belief of sort (11 B x) particular or 
general a some unsensed thing or attribute by a some deter- 
minate or indeterminate assurance of such in a some plain to 
vague sense of necessity experience or say-so. 

49 



Indefinite experience and say so often mingled. Uncritical 
reliance on say so, is credulousness; critical reliance on say so, 
a test of the same in necessity experience or verified testimony. 

x Terms of inference, are ever the objects of belief, or dis- 
belief, and that a sense or implication of necessity experience or 
deferred say so true false exaggerated or depreciated: — verifica- 
tion, the any bringing together to coincidence or incoincidence 
the inferred individuals to that a true sense of necessity exper- 
ience or authority — 10, & [Note how unthoughted most people 
are about a test of what they receive, and their easy deceptions to 
interested professionalism politics preference etc. Of interest 
systematic or issolate a disturber of natural inference-, see 
theistic dogma and conduct fitting aii any associated desire for 
future life infusedly lay, an a social deference and renumerated 
effort comfortably cleric: and samely so of much liberty and be- 
havior affecting our present system of avocational and official 
sharp practice fit an underlying profit grabbing casuistry — (1 
m & &) : — see here of common conversation uncritical receipt 
or rejection of that coincident or incoincident with personal or 
class interests of sort, or factional enthusiasms cover of it in 
false dress,, and studied or casual hedge of it in hate — so cosy 
and comfortable is it to believe what one wants so or not so, and 
so provoking is it to have such a state of things pryed into or 
obstructed by enemies]. 

Approval or disapproval of an any say so true or false of 
fact or right or wrong of conduct, comes of a some sense of 
necessity experience or corroborated sayso affirming or denying 
it when rationally received, or the same coinciding or not with a 
some want don't want like dislike or influence of others when 
credulously received @. [Rejection of an any some introduced 
notions of phenomena or conduct of sort founded on a sense of 
necessity experience or verified authority by it in conflict with 
some personal or systematic interests of sort like or dislike, is 
prejudice; reception same, candor. [For examples of prejudice-, 
see common sense opinions of greatly ignored critics versus per- 
verted knowledge and rights of conduct suppressed ignored or 
condemned in official subsidized endowed and personally inter- 
ested influences of denunciation ignoration ridicule suppression 
and contempt of sort prejudice of men national partisan theolog- 
ical school capitalistic laboristic medical or business in perver- 
sionary interest: — common sense unmolested and complete, the 
only criterion of truth or falsity of fact, and surect reflection 
of right and wrong conduct. 



(3 "The observation of nature by uncultivated intellects, is 
surely passive — it is a superior mind only which asks what facts 
are needed to come to a safe conclusion, and looks out for 
these." [J. S. Mill.] 

"The habit of dwelling on verbal expressions view of others, 
and being content with such xxx, is fatal to firm and clear 
thought." [Whewel. See his Hist Induct Sciences Book 4, ch 1.] 

"To see accurately and completely, is a power given to few — 
hence the observations of the majority of people, are of no 
scientific value whatever." [John Burroughs.'] 



50 



** To the critical observer of social phenomena, the tram- 
melled and untrammelled credulity of men (professional and 
lay), is phenomenally astounding and socially alarming. In the 
present state of wilful and unwilful deception remunerative or 
newsy, and perverted and stupid credulity-, there is no uncritical 
story of discovery or event ism cheat trick of trade cure politics 
or other pretention that is not eagerly swallowed by a multitude 
to many or a few uncritical dupes of this newspaper and other 
deception. In this the liberty of a press school and person that 
only seeks gain or notoriety by systematic or other deception, 
and cram of their columns curriculum or speech with moral or 
intellectual trash, is prime cause of the whole evil. [Thus of 
wilful and unwilful deception by casual coincidence-, an any al- 
leged something paraded as cause of a some other thing or 
things covered up with it in tangled phenomena of kind, is re- 
ceived by the credulous without question nor distinction from 
other knowledge — (hence sovereignty of the demagogue yellow 
journalism and professionalism over gullible adherents of party- 
ism medicine <J powwow charm palmistry clairvoyency etc of 



<J "On entering duty at Bellvue Hospital in Aug., 1862-, 
I resolved to treat with paliative measures only all cases of 
articular rheumatism; xxx but to secure the mental effect of a 
remedy given especially for the disease, a placebo of tincture of 
quassia bark diluted was given in nearly all the cases: the 
favorable progress of these cases was such as to secure for the 
supposed remedy the entire confidence of the patients. The dur- 
ation of acute articular rheumatism varies, and the disease ends 
of self limitation xxx when left to itself." [Flints Practice of 
Medicine.] In other parts of this same book-, this author vir- 
tually informs his students that the other fatal diseases here 
known as Typho Malaria Fever, and Pneumonia, there is 
nothing in the Materia Medica that will cure them: Yet in the 
face of all this and much other knowledge like-, there has been 
no instance of such disease occurring within the authors knowl- 
edge excepting his own family that a doctor was not called for, 
and a big bill run up by him in the pretence of curing the disease 
with internal remedies. Aside from this-, one half at least of 
the affections known as simple fever, and other quite harmless 
diseases, are treated by doctors of our day with internal rem- 
edies that have no other result than a deceptive appearance of 
cure to the patient and friend, and a good fat doctor bill the 
other end of the fraud. [Of patient and friend-, the motive to 
all this comes of fear and ignorance of disease; of the doctor-, 
effective desire for money (greatly stimulated of great fear and 
anxious deference), and love of professional deference. Assist- 
ance to natural recovery usual, comes of careful nourishment 
temperance anticeptic and other poisons. Materia Medica of our 
professions, a fraud on people wildly clutching about them for 
health.] 

51 



our day) I also same of other false knowledge paraded mostly 
of an interested authority, and credulously received by a gullible 
crowd beneath it — (often with sacrifice of life or property) : — 
hence power of Mohametanism Catholicism professionalism and 
smatter over credulous endorsers of a whatever apthority: par- 
aded education of our day-, greatly a preparatory exercise of 
all this,- an immense jugglery of thing in hazy word, and a 
waste of means ability and intellect — hence to a conservation of 
this condition of knowledge (versus anti theological political 
medical legal and business criticism oppositional present grooved 
authority and organized selfishness)-, the walls of our common 
schools, lecture halls churches colleges and news offices, are as 
impenetrable barriers of conservatism pertinaciously guarded of 
sectarianism partyism professionalism and trade — tricks of trade 
other deception, and the true process of knowing things, should 
be exposed in our newspapers, common schools, colleges churches 
etc, additional to other useful knowledge — news apprise of harm 
and restrain of wrong important items.] 

m Then inferences of alleged phenomena, or right and 
wrong conduct (43) resting on authority shorn of necessity 
experience or corroboration in sort, or the same drawn in greater 
or less values than that of their premise in necessity experience 
or corroboration (10 x) , are so far untrue or erroneous conclu- 
sions: and inferences of thing or attribute drawn from premises 
whose values are uncertain, are or should be indeterminate con- 
clusions €]J*. [Synthetic or analytic inferences or sort, are 
collected or disjoined factors of scattered or aggregated facts 
connecting or dissolving a collection whole or part of reason — 
(see cumulative and critical evidence) : however when such rea- 
soning contains unobtainable or indissoluble factors remote or 
intricate of phenomena (more likely than not)-, they are very 
liable to error by joinures or disjoinures of thing extraneous or 
assumed of reasoning], 

•I* Hence the notions of this and that form of limited 
government as a better or worse system of rule respectively 
as nation espoused, and Protective Tariff or Free Trade cause 
of national prosperity as party espoused, are uncertain or er- 
roneous conclusions,- by uncertainty or erroneousness of such 
connections of cause and effect in the premises: — hence of tariff 
endless dispute and constant ilteration and hate the foundation 
shibboleth of the two parties in the United States. [From the 
workings of protective tariff and free trade in fact-, the only 
affirmative conclusion that can be safely drawn from them, is 
that of a protective tariff enhancing the price of a commodity 
in a some amount to the consumer at home, with a transfer of 
production and employment in a greater or less amount from 
a free trade point to a protected point; and vice versa, of a 
free trade lessening the price of a commodity to the consumer 
abroad at least concomitant an any transfer or holding of 
production and employment from an any undeveloped point. 

52 



For examples of inference based upon authority-, the fol- 
lowers of quite all existing religious, are living examples of our 
day — in that their premises rest on supposed revelations of a 
first authority handed down for generations or translated infor- 
mations precedents directions dictations extolations denuncia- 
tions and examples inappreciably varied in translation trans- 
cription interpretation (11 A m) and arbitrary invasions of in- 
terest and passion priestly and kingly: — continuation of all 
this, is by iteration and credulous receipt of doctrines assumed 
true and practices right as that resting on a whatever authority 
deferred and espoused of training whim, or the often friendly 
and calculating toils of proselyteism and income: also seriously 
and dangerously illustrated in the beliefs and patronage of men 
under partisan capitalistic medical mercantile and other control, 
and resting mostly upon the say-so of leaders cunning or shrewd 
to class or individual gain. [Of conflict in authority-, all as 
antagonisms of opposing systems in variable forms of dislike 
and revenge; and that of long standing revenges and hates be- 
comes an almost impenetrable barrier to reform and destruc- 
tion of such tyrannies in authority: — se most religious and na- 
tional policies of the earth past to present kept afire of itterate 
swarmery, and hedged in hate and revenge — conceit and arrog- 
ance quite proportional to abjectness and applaud of belief. 

m Of induction or deduction immediate of premises in 
fact-, exampled of affirmative reasoning as follows: — Space of 
critical thought in all or any experience $, is seen to ever have 
length breadth and thickness: every man under any greatest 
living age within ours and others experience have died — (there- 
fore all men or these men here are mortal) : The square of the 
hypotenues of all rightangled triangles verified were equal to the 
squares of their sides — (therefore the hypotenuses of all right- 
angled triangles or this one here, are equal to the squares of 
their sides: Rain fall of all recorded experiences has usually 



$ Apparently resting on experience as here stated: how- 
ever space of particular thought in experience (7m*) is seen 
to be the determinator of necessity of space ever having length 
breadth thickness etc. See J. S. Mills discussion with others as 
to all knowledge resting on experience only in his System of 
Logic. & Sense of necessity here, a matter of consciousness 
as that of other inference, is to be discriminated from external 
consciousness in that the objects of inference are not matters of 
consciousness more than that the conscious feeling of the in- 
ference itself — objective consciousness, a sensation of external 
objects, and a sensation of the feeling of necessity here an 
internal sensation. [8 **] 

53 



followed a certain barometrical pressure of the air and hu- 
midity — therefore all or this reasons rainfalls have and will 
usually follow a certain barometric pressure and humidity of 
the air. 

Of induction or deduction negative exampled as follows : — 
Every man within our experience and testimony of others with- 
out exception was not perfect in morals religion or anything 
else — (therefore man or this man here is not perfect) : Paral- 
lel lines of an any particular apprehension, is seen to necessarily 
not enclose space — (therefore all parallel lines or the ones I 
will now draw cannot necessarily enclose space) : Most men of 
all our notices of experience were not more sagacious than vera- 
cious — therefore men in general or particular, are not more 
sagacious than veracious. 

Of induction and deduction affirmative and negative or 
negative and affirmative-, exampled as follows: This piece of 
granite here by sense of it an existence first and necessity sec- 
ond, is seen to necessarily exist — (therefore all matter and force 
or this piece of marble in substance cannot cease to exist — 
(7m); vice versa of conception-, an anything real of my imag- 
ination (7 m *, 11 B x ) can never conceptively go to nothing — 
(therefore all matter and force whatever or this here in esse 
will continue to exist forever) : & Of all experience-, we are 
only conscious (11 a *) of internal and external objects of 
sensation — (therefore all persons whatever, or an any of the 
people of this vicinity, are not conscious of sensational changes 
nervously within them) ; vice versa-, we are not conscious of 
sensations within themselves — (therefore all or my own con- 
sciousness late, is invariably of internal or external objects — 
17 <I: All variable phenomena of our experience, have varied 
within themselves — (therefore all variable phenomena (for a 
long while at least), or that a one to soon occur will not be- 
come invariable) ; vice versa-, all invariable phenomena of our 
experience, have never become variable — (therefore all (any), 
or this and that variable phenomena to occur, will (for a long 
time at least) recur variable) : Most men of our experience, 
are men of good intention — (therefore most of all men whatever, 
or most citizens of this place, are not men of evil intentions; 
vice versa-, most men of our experience, are not men of bad in- 
tentions — (therefore most of al men whatever, or most citizens 
of this place, are men of good intention) : Most animals of 
ours and others experience live by prehension — (therefore most 
of all animals whatever, or most our own in this vicinity, can- 
not live without prehension; vice versa-, most of all animals 
within ours and others experience, have not lived without pre- 

54 



hension — therefore most of all animals, or most of our own, 
live by prehension. [In all change to extinction, values of 
variables wil not remain same; and some of the variables and 
invariables border of each other, may pass to the other in long 
change — hence not absolute but valid for all practicable purposes 
to knowledge. [See J. S. -Mills System of Logis B 3, Ch 3]. 

Of deduction of the Schools (as inference from inductive 
judgments (and not the premise)-, exampled affirmatively as 
follows: — The square of the hypotenuse of a right-angled tri- 
angle, is equal to the squares of its sides — (therefore the square 
of the hypotenuse of these three rightangled points true, is 
equal to the squares of their sides: All men are mortal— 
(therefore this man here will die) : Most of all men, are men 
of good intention — therefore this man here, is likely a man of 
good intention. ^ 

Of negative deduction-, exampled as follows : — Parallel lines 
never enclose space — (therefore these two parallel lines extended 
parallel will never enclose space) : No man lives to the age of 
two hundred years — (therefore this man here will never live to 
the age of two hundred years) : Most men, are not men of bad 
intention — therefore this man here, is not likely a man of bad 
intention. 

Of the affirmative and negative or vice versa-, exampled as 
follows: — Matter and force will always exist — (therefore this 
body and mind of mine in its elemtary factors, will never be 
annihilated) : vice versa-, matter and force in esse, will continue 
to exist — (therefore this body and spirit of mine in esse, will 
continue to exist) : & we are conscious of external and internal 
things only — (therefore-, I am not conscious of sensational 
changes nervously elementary) ; vice versa-, men are not con- 
scious of sensations to objects in themselves — (therefore I am 
conscious of objects only) : All uncertain phenomena, will ever 
remain variable of cluster — (therefore this and that changeable 
phenomena to occur, will be variable) : Most men are of good 
intention — (therefore this and that man are not likely men of 
bad intention) : vice versa-, most of all men, are not men of bad 
intention — therefore this or that man is more than likely a 
man of good intention $±. & [In all syllogism, assertions only 
are dealt with, and the facts (premise) to substantiation of 
them not attended to — the great fondling of professionalism in 
theology and the schools, and potentials of deception in trade and 
politics — no inquiry into the why need apply]. 

55 



tt In all syllogistic modes of reasoning so much wrangled 
about by the schools-, the major term that does not include 
experience a factor, is not the premise of the minor in any part 
whatever; but is partially so in all major terms that include 
experience — (the major term thus mostly an inference induct- 
ive as that of the minor term deductive from premises included 
in the class as those individuals of it that have been in experi- 
ence, or that are to (7 *) necessary inference: — exampled of 
all tense in All men or animals, are mortal, and that Alexander 
and Bucephelus have died, and King William and Selim will 
die — the first inductive (general classification), the two later 
deductive; — (particular classification) ; and all as general or 
particular inferences of mortality from same observations of 
mortality in this that and all other men or animals known to 
have died-, as the perceived individuals (the possible premise,- 
9 *) of inductive and deductive conclusion. [Then "All men or 
all animals" mortality of perception, is the premise concert of 
the inferred portion (greater) from which the inferred portion 
is drawn in connection with the perceived portion a total — a 
conclusion without necesity or experience, a matter of whole 
belief. To this induction here based upon experience-, there is 
a negative premise of existence impliedly realizd in connction 
with the positive: — descriptively the absence of prior man's or 
older animals' existence in perception of their absence in place 
limited in apprehension, and necessary to a continued exist- 
ence in our prisence unless transported to heaven regions by 
miracle — the conceptive possibility of such a transportation in 
sense barely defeating it a necessary inference. A major term 
including only experience (9 *.) is wholly a premise — See J. S. 
Mills Logic Book 2, ch 3, and Aristotle for exposition of the 
nature of the Syllogism as come to this]. 

y Of indeterminate inference-, exampled as follows: — 
From observations of many different forms of limited govern- 
ment and forms of contention within, and the prosperities and 
depressions of their industry at varying times-, it has been 
quite impossible to tell from the cold facts themselves shorn 
of theory and national or party dislike whether or not any one 
of them is best of all*, or the any one better than the any an- 
other one — therefore that any one of the present forms of 
limited government given to us, is best of all, or better than 
the any another one, is yet in fact an indeterminate question. 
Again : from the complexity and multiplicity of causes and ef- 
fects that make up the concatenation of a nations industry and 
enjoyment-, it has yet been impossible for a mind shown of 
party prejudice to know certainly whether or not a Protective 
tariff or Free trade policy in a nation, is the one a better or 



* "For if anyone should propose to all men to select the 
best institutions of all that exist, each after considering them 
all would choose their own." [Herodotus] 

56 



worse means of promoting the general welfare of a people — 
therefore etc. [Either equitable or inequitable when a protective 
or a raid of lawful effort — 43]. 

He Emotion is an any appreciating or disturbing sensa- 
tion of like or dislike to that pleasing displeasing satisfying un- 
satisfying wanted not-wanted approved disapproved useful 
harmful helpful or obstructive to life. 

M Toward things satisfying want in itself, persons ap- 
proving that liked or disliked in ourselves, or that aiding pursuit 
possession use or riddence of thing when inability prevails or 
obstruction exceeds the pleasureable-, there accompanies or 
grows to a some greater or less strength of attachment or 
favor accumulated feelings (11 A x) of sort appreciatively 
known as like or love: and toward same (Appendix A) or other 
things giving bodily or mental pain or discomfort of any degree 
in themselves, persons disapproving likes or dislikes in them- 
selves, or things obstructing pursuit posession use or riddence 
of thing in any way-, there accompanies or grows to a some 
variable strength of avoidance or recrimination accumulated 
feelings of sort varying in degree of intensity or continuance of 
the annoyance disapproved or obstruction affected, and disturb- 
ently known as dislike or hatred. 

Many of our likes and dislikes vary individually and col- 
lectively as difference in training, variations of our intellectual 
and emotional natures and fads of casual notion. Our apprecia- 
tions of like and conceit of self and others ilk, are intensified 
of associating friendship, and disturbed of intruding enmity — 

(national partisan sectarian avocational or other conceit ilk of 
importance group, ever inflamed of national partisan sectarian 
avocational or other ilking junket array or convocation) : of 
enmity our wants of revenge and dislikes of offense, are partially 
or wholly quenched in others contribution or punishment. [Of- 
fense in word or deed, begets anger, anger revenge, and re- 
venge (word or deed) shame or anger — hence of retaliation 

(rational or irrational) avoided in punishment or restriction-, 
the state is made accuser, and the criminal power punisher; 
or the offended, is made plaintiff, and the civil power arbiter.] 

x Anticipation or bar to things of like in want, or sus- 
picion or allay of things of don't want, produces within us of 
anticipation or bar an excitation of hope or despair, and of 
suspicion or allay an excitation of fear or relief: gain or loss 
of things of like in want, or stay or let of things of dislike in 
don't want, produces (causes) within us of gain or loss an 
excitation of joy or sorrow, and of stay or let an excitation 
of ease or aggravation: Assurance or uncertainty of things of 
like in want or the same of things of dislike in dont want, 

57 



produces within us of the one an excitation of trust or distrust, 
and of the other an excitation (effect) of despair or trouble. 
Again: Things in appreciating sensation or thought volitionally 
disagreeing to that they naturaly or conceptively ought to be, 
produces (causes) within us when unlooked for and not seri- 
ously harmful, a pleasant excitation of humor or ridicule; and 
when seriously disliked, a disturbing feeling of disgust or anger: 
— of humor or ridicule-, the disagreement of a real or assumed 
something to what it ought to be, must be apprehended a some- 
thing not seriously discrepant of inconvenience or harm; and of 
disgust or anger-, the disagreement of a real or assumed some- 
thing to what it ought to be, must be felt a something seriously 
discrepant of inconvenience or harm: manifested humor or ridi- 
cule producing smile or laughter; disgust or anger, producing 
frown or vengeance — to the subject of humor-, we are friendly, 
and to the subject of ridicule unfriendly. Again: things of 
knowledge objectively agreeable or disagreeable to sense or use- 
fulness (suitability), produces within us of occasion a feeling 
(effect) of sort pleasing or unpleasing to sight feel hear taste 
or smell: — exampled of the any feelings of like or dislike in the 
imposing beautiful novel insignificant ugly monotonous easy 
laborious useful harmful etc to sense of sighft — (63*) ; pleasant- 
ness or unpleasantness of that smooth soft yielding soothing 
rough hard irritating etc to sense of touch; feelings harmonious 
(nervously easy) or unharmonious (nervously disturbent) to 
sense of hearing; and effects of that sweet savory nauseous un- 
savory etc to sense of taste or smell : of feeling within as internal 
sensation-, see feelings of importance humility and other to 
appreciations of conceit or disturbances of humility etc. Affec- 
tion of things on sense without appreciation or disagreeableness, 
produces within us a feeling of knowledge without emotion. & 
[The emotional here, is to be distinguished from the intellectual-, 
in that one is a feeling of like or dislike to want dont-want, the 
pleasant unpleasant satiated unsatiated etc*, and the other a 
feeling of knowledge: — hence of above examples-, the causes of 
anticipation bar suspicion allay gain loss stay let etc, and sense 
of that to the imposing insignificant beautiful smooth rough etc, 
belong to intelligence; while their effects hope despair fear relief 
joy sorrow etc belong to emotion:!:. 

± Thus all our sensations remembrances or conceptions of 
objects external, or sensations of remembrance conception emo- 
tion motive volition and feeling of self within constitute knowl- 
edge; and all our feelings of like or dislike in the pleasing dis- 
pleasing want don't want etc resultantly accompanying knowl- 
edge, constitutes emotion $. [For example of finer emotion-, 

58 



see history, then sing of "Our Flag is There", "There's a 
Light in the Window for Thee", "Nearer My God to Thee" etc 
of many other songs hymns melodies etc — (note power of song 
in disturbant emotion blended with the agreeable) : — see elab- 
orated power of music oratory and associating friendship to the 
any fastening of political or religious beliefs — cultivated hate, 
an enduring hedge of that without. Of conflict in emotion-, see 
divisional hate of the Ritualists Anglican yet suppressing in 
the soothing appreciations of a soft and comfortable stipend: 
also see error of poetic and dramatic art in the abrupt connec- 
tion of two or more emotions destructive of each other — hence 
necessity of interlude between conflicting emotions sufficient to 
the expenditure of one before the beginning of the other. In- 
tensity of emotion, grades all the way of a slight feeling to 
that manifesting itself in various expressions of the face arms 
legs and body: — for instance anger begins in the slightest feel- 
ing of indignation, and climaxes in the almost frenzied feeling 
of revengeful destruction; the feeling of humor, begins of a 
slightest smile, and climaxes in laughter and applause; the 
feeling of joy, begins of the slightest feeling of mental gratifica- 
tion, and climaxes in the tears and embrace or shout of extreme 
gladness; the feeling of fear, begins of the least feeling of 
anxiety, and climaxes in the wild frenzy of incordinative terror; 
the imposing, begins of the least feeling of awe, and climaxes 
in the awful feeling of a mighty power; the beautiful, begins 
of the least feeling of attraction, and climaxes in the feelings 
of extreme facination; etc. 

Y Sense of something nervously exciting within us atten- 
tion duty need hunger thirst riddance usefulness or conven- 
ience, available satisfaction or relief or the agreeable of sensa- 
tion or thought, produces within us a sensation of want or de- 
sire; and sense of something exciting inattention unusefulness 
harm pain uneasiness inconvenience or the disagreeable of 
knowledge, produces within us a sensation of don't want,- or 
the undesirable and comprehension of attention, sense of duty 
done, need attended, rights secured, hunger or thirst assuaged, 
pain or uneasiness allayed, the pleasurable of sense appeased, 
or relief of inattention or don't want, produces within us a 
sensation of satisfaction or satiety @@: vice versa want or 
desire again. ft 

@@ See conjunctive terminations meet of afferent and 
motor nerves in digestive secretive respiratory cerebral and 
muscular cells, and ganglionic clusters of cell organo-electric 
(28(5) ) systematically promptu and co-ordinate internal needs 
or conscious wants reflex or volitional of protoplasmic vesicular 
or volitional appropriation or elimination of thing material or 
immaterial: elimination or appropriation resultant, afferant 
again in feelings of satiety. [Bodily or mental pain or un- 
easiness disturbently afferant, relief soothingly motor, and ease 
afferent again in antithesis : — bodily pain or uneasiness, quite 
likely (11 A w n, 23, 24, 27, 28) a sense of actual or tending 
lesion molecular of nervous substance, and ease secondary, a 
restoration or amendment antithetical. Sensation of temper- 
ance (limited) painful or uncomfortable of a high low or dis- 

59 



integrating heat or cold (cold tendingly crystalic), and sooth- 
ing or pleasant of a tending normal nervous vibration from a 
too highly or lowly excited condition of nerves. Of replenish- 
ment same to sense-, see in fulness of nourishment and rest, 
motivity to a pleasant sense of whittleing, tatoo of foot or fin- 
gers, rocking stretching yawning play or other relieving exer- 
cise recreative or occupational * <I ; and vice versa tiresomeness 
of nervous depletion mind or body: so of other sense (bodily or 
mental), a variable state of potential or vibratory condition of 
brain or nerves (high to low) to feelings of high to low ex- 
penditure exhilerating normal or painful — (see in this variable 
temperaments of great energy conserving to entire loss of 
energy self-sustaining, and afferences of want to enforcements 
of habit — greater energy and economy-, the back bone of all 
thrift in industry avocationally conservative, and lesser energy 
and economy mediocre to hangers of general welfare: — all told-, 
an initiatory afferency and consequent motovity here, a some 
regularly recurring or incidental disturbance of cell by a some 
source of depletion fulness or intrusion internally or externally 
compulsory (11 A o z) a some appropriation and change use or 
elimination (33) conservative. Afferency conjunctive with feel- 
ings appreciative of thing, a casual conjunction of thing and 
feeling in periods of suitabitity. [See Carpenter's Hum Physol 
ch 8. For an example of afferency in sensation-, note same 
of thirst, and its wane and satisfaction quickly following each 
other in intensified thirst and quench of it. See cell structure 
and doing recipient and motor of plant and animal life. Of 
fulness of nourishment relieved in recreation-, see organs or 
use of organs in lower life unaccounted for in usefulness to 
sustenance procreation or preservation — see in all this move- 
ments to play evident, and extraneous doings in aimless life].## 

*^ Of life attributable to plethora of muscular nourish- 
ment-, note extraneous movements and articulate effusions of 
children or men at play, and all restless doing; noise sing soar 
circle dive and flit of birds in aimless iterate activity; iterate 
noises and doing of insects outside appropriation elimination 
procreation escape attack or defense, etc other. [Guide to life, 
afferency let alone or restrained by actual or assumed conse- 
quenses to natural or aberrate want.] 

## Provision and avoidence of things of want and don't 
want, are often through means and mediums of the agreeable 
in effort, and oftener through means and mediums of the dis- 
agreeable in effort: — hence multiplication and struggle for avo- 
cations inordinately remunerative and comfortable of effort; 
and hence drudgery and ignoring of the lower classes in so- 
ciety. [59*. Of the agreeable in effort-, see of capitalism 
officialism clergy and professionalism efforts and devices legion 
to excite within succoring others an innovated or continued 
want of their wares or services of sort inordinately remunera- 
tive or cozy of effort, and often meanfully bodily intellectually 
morally or emotionally injurious useless or short of value to 
those succoring the cheat: thus the incantation of personal dis- 
play munificence and dignitary reserve of great officialism or 
wealth, is great personality some how, and the excitation of a 

60 



desire of the like in the multitude, and consequent approval 
and guard of such (within themselves; also the effect and object 
of munificent and other works of art in the cosmopolitan cities, 
is greatly the inspiration of an outside want to see them, and 
consequent flow of money from more slavish places patronage 
into elite avocations and little drain of their material resources 
in return — hence immense sums of money drained the world 
over with little material return in the facinating and reveren- 
cial sights of London Paris Rome Athens Constantinople Jer- 
usalem Cairo and other toll taking places of modern treasure 
and remains of art and reverence. [<& The effect of greater 
to huge centers of trade insurance loan stock gambling other 
gambling prostitution quackery etc in the cities (venal fraud- 
ulent and questionable centers of vice and sharpe practice), is 
the excitation of a greater number of wants from outside places 
patronage to such centers of short return luxury and vice, and 
consequent drain of the earning wealth of outside places by 
earning and taxable transfer there: — hence landlord and other 
capitalistic accumulations of great wealth in the great cities 
at the drudgery of other places thus depleted of their earning 
wealth; and hence Swifts bitter complaint of absentee land- 
lordism — "The old seats of nobility and gentry all in ruins, 
and no new ones in their stead" — all, all gone to Dublin London 
and other. 

z Things of effective want dont-want and ability (actual 
or assumed) , produces within us a feeling motive to action or no 
as the case may be; and thing of untrameled or prevailing mo- 
tive, produces within us a feeling of volition immediate or de- 
ferred of do or not do as the case may be: and thing of want 
and inability, or dont-want in itself, a no-motive and a no- 
volition. [Want or dont-want (either wider than ability), is 
narrower than like or dislike,- in that a want and a dont-want, 
comprehends only that portion of the species liked or disliked as 
that existing of the any state of want or dont-want of the time; 
while like and dislike, comprehends that all other of remem- 
brance or conception in the species of like or dislike, benefication 
here, is per that absolute of name and proposition true to nature 
—7*]. 



NAME AND PROPOSITION. 

12 Name, is positive negative or indeterminate designation 
of an any some structure causing effect form quality quantity 
place or time of sort apart or whatever way combined in an any 
circumscribing word or words. 

m Names are distinguished general or particular when 
designating a general colection whole or portion a one or more 
species (9*), or a particular one or more individuals — (names 

61 



of thing or attribute collected, ever names of thing or attribute 
individually alike in species, and specifically resembling in groups 
as degrees of resemblance between the juxtaposed species 
grouped in subjective or predicative name. [Of collection-, ex- 
ampled in mould a collection of all species mould alike between 
the individuals in each species, and resembling between the jux- 
taposed species collected; also of white, a collection of all varie- 
ties of a quality quite alike within the varieties, and nearly alike 
between the varieties. Of subjective and predicative name-, see 
lx@@, 61, and Names and Propositions of J. S. Mills Logic]. 

13 Description, is the any setting out to view alone or 
the same and conduct an any thing things attribute or attributes 
of thing portional a some greater whole or part general or par- 
ticular a some subject to predicate, or leader to adjunct as that 
predicate a proposition or modifying a leader. 

** Description, is ever a some predicative or adjunctive 
declaration or naming of sort affirmatively negatively or inde- 
terminately inexhaustive all applications of its subject or lead- 
ing expression. Of description here-, adjuncts usually precede 
of simple word, and follow of phrase or sentence: however some 
such conjunction of words precede an expression they modify — 
exampled of a certain portion of all even number. [Note each 
term of words here mutually limited of all functions in expres- 
sion by each conjunction back and forward of word phrase 
clause or sentence in an any expression — (8 n n z z) ; and same 
of any expression distinct as polyphonically limiting its pre- 
cedent expression, and vice versa: — hence all words of expres- 
sion distinct, and all distinct expressions conjoined of description, 
are but limiting conjunctions of word or other expression from 
start to finish — conjunction of limiting words appliedly subjec- 
tive or leading and their definitions adjunctively descriptive, 
all of applying limitations in either term equivalent in meaning, 
words and numbers in meaning, universally general until lim- 
ited of applying description widening of increased application. 
Take any section here for example, and note carefully the lim- 
iting applications of word apart and collected when not equiv- 
alent to each other — limitations here, are of all applications of 
word or other expression by their any whatever modifier adjunc- 
tive or predicative and true or untrue to nature or art. See 
also prefix suffix or other syllable descriptive of root or other 
formative modified thereby in application: — (13 n) ; so of letter 
to syllable. 

Of recognitive description predicatively simple-, exampled 
in Snow is white: It is roundish in form; John is reciting etc: — 
of our first and second examples here-, a one of each of all things 
that may be said of "Snow" and "It", is asserted of them as 
"white", or "roundish in form",- another attribute; while of our 
last example "is reciting", describes of John a certain set of 
activities, out of a myriad of Johns activities and inactivities 

62 



that might be applied of Johns doings,- as a certain few of all 
of them [See form and quality descriptive of things in 2, 3]. 

Of description predicatively compounded to recognition-, 
exampled affirmatively in the assertion All animals that rumi- 
nate, live on vegetable food, and part the hoof: — here the func- 
tions "live on vegetable food, and part the hoof", are two some- 
things of many that exist, or that may be asserted of them; and 
exampled negatively in All animals that do not chew the cud, do 
not part the hoof, nor have a second stomach — here the negative 
functions described of the subject, are two absent things of 
many that may be asserted of their subject "All animals" etc. 

Of description adjunctively recognitive-, the above first 
sentence in part, will serve for an illustration of others: — as of 
the active subject "All animals-, the adjunct expression "that 
ruminate", makes a descriptive expression of the more general 
it modifies (describes) of "All animals"-, by taking of the class 
"All animals" those particular ones having a habit (absent in 
others) of ruminating — (hence this subject, a descriptive sub- 
ject) : also same of the predicate in the same setence being ad- 
junctively descriptive in connection with its subject verbally de- 
scriptive,- in that the verbs "live" and "part", are circumscribed 
of all activities universal of live and part, as that of all animals 
that live on vegetable food and part the hoof — ("live" and "part" 
applicable to any number of other functions outside of this,- a 
limitation of the universal) * : illustrated again and negatively 
this time in Subjects not descriptive, are naught other than sim- 
ply named subjects: — here the subject "Subjects" limited ad- 
junctively to only subjects that are devoid of description, is re- 
peated in its subject word impliedly transposed to its verb "ars", 
and limited in "are subjects" naught other than simply named 
subjects: Again of adjunctive description name-, exampled 
positively of The subject of a simple porposition, and negatively 
of The predicate of a sentence not compounded'. — here of the 
first-, "a proposition" is limited from that of a proposition in 
all its existences (a universal) to "a proposition that is sim- 
ple",- or not compounded; and of the second example-, "a sen- 
tence" (the leader of the adjunctive expression), is only that of 
"a sentence not compounded" — all other stences universal of 
expression excluded. 

Of recognitive description quantative-, exampled by verb 
in the expression All quadrupeds, possess four organs of loco- 
motion, and one of prehension; and by adjunct in Silver to the 

63 



amount of five million ounces: — here of our first example "four 
organs of locomotion and one of prehension, are quantative 
things to the amount of five out of all properties descriptive of 
such subject short of definition; and of our second example-, 
the adjuctive expression "To the amount of five million ounces" 
quantatively takes out of "Silver" (all silver) a portion to an 
amount of "five million ounces",- as such a portion of all por- 
tions of "Silver". [See quantity description of thing in Sec' 4], 

Of placeful and timeful description recognitive-, exampled 
in Trajan reigned in Rome from the years 98 A D to the year 
117 A D; and by adjunct-, in Rome of Italy in the time of Julius 
Caesar: — here of our first example "Trajan" out of an infinite 
number of assertions exhaustive of him as a subject of descrip- 
tion, is here described as reigning in "Rome" (place) from the 
year 98 to the year 117 A D — (time) ; and of the second-, "Rome 
of Italy in the time of Julius Caesar", is just such a portion of 
all Rome in all place and time as that adjunctive of it here in 
place and time. £See 5, 6 descriptive of thing attributively ap- 
plied]. 

Of indeterminate description recognition-, exampled as fol- 
lows: — If what he says be true-, there is great uncertainty 
about the whole matter: Worldly belief exclusive a belief in an 
because of greater crime. He may have gone to tow,n or may 
or may not go: Is he going or not to the performance of his 
duties : Kings may be blessed : It may or may not be true that 
Homer was a real personage: etc of all recognitions or discrim- 
inations that do not exhaust the all of thing or attribute in sub- 
ject or leading expression other. [15 c] 

For descriptions pertaining to emotion or volition-, see all 
expression portional any such states of mind. [8*. The voli- 
tional here, of internal impulse advice petition or dictation; 
emotional here, of like dislike love fear want don-want and 
other.] 

* For examples-, write out this or any verb, and insert 
and substitute any number of positive or negative subjects 
objects adjuncts or verbs — (48 $) ; then rub out add or substi- 
tute any number of words or portions of name subjective or 
objective: so of the adjuncts verbs etc to any concert and var- 
iation of propositions to true untrue freak or erroneous cir- 
cumscription of objects. [This book has been a production 
muchly of this process as thoughts so intricate have come to 
mind and been fastened for the time in words to be added to, 
taken from, or substituted as concert of it slowly progressed, 
to its present condition — (a work now (1907) of over twenty- 
four years labor by the author here in copyright: All an at- 

64 



tempted coincidence of word factor of name, name factor of 
proposition, and proposition to proposition a true representa- 
tion of thing and attribute real to nature and art — an unwel- 
come visitor may be. Antithet of this-, see play of words to 
proposition catch of men by humor and flattery; also rule of 
men by wily praise and reproach of faction in fine spun webs 
of interested deception]. 

Description is to be distinguished from definition in that 
description always takes recognizance of only a some portion of 
that that can be universally affirmed and implied, or denied 
and negatively implied of its subject or subjects, or other 
modified leader or leaders of expression; while a definition 
takes in all that can be affirmed and affirmatively implied, or 
excludes all that can be denied or deniably implied of its sub- 
ject or subjects, or other modified leader or leaders of expres- 
sion — an exclusion of all outside. 

Perceived or imagined things or attributes of an any de- 
scription, are distinguished as that of sensation or imagination 
in positive negative or indeterminate judgment: — exampled of 
perception in "Snow is white"; and an imagination A centaur 
is an imagined animal half man and half horse — the latter not as 
some philosophers have it (to support a theory of definition) 
"A centaur means an imagined animal etc, expresses a fact as 
is only exists or has been known to exist; while the words 
"A centaur" (only) means an imagined animal etc,- and not 
the assumed animal itself. [See definition Mills Logic] 

n Of abstract and concrete parts of speech-, words sub- 
jects or predicates, are divisible into abstract or concrete words 
or descriptions when the neither all nor limited any unapplied of 
the species or individuals of a collection, are set out (circum- 
scribed) to mind as mentally a singular or plural group of the 
"neither all" nor "limited any" of the individuals involved — all 
as with or without their leaders of expression qualified with 
any some abstract or corrcrete adjuncts of expression irrespec- 
tive of abstractness or concreteness of the leaders — distribu- 
tive of the adjuncts a an or any, and collective of the all or ever. 
[Sound words to themselves,- for the neither all nor any part]. 

n Of exampler abstract and concrete words or descrip- 
tions-, exampled in man and men; whiteness of nominative 
word, and white things of description; Any animal a runimant, 
and animals runimant; and color of earthly bodies, and colors 
of earthly bodies of description. [All concretes, are the factors 
to the abstract or concrete whole alike — for instance the con- 
cretes composeracm men, any man, all men, or an any singular 
or plural man or men designated. [See abstract and concrete 
terms of Platos Ideal Theory,- Lewes Biog Hist Philos-, and 
11 a x here: see number abstract, numbers concrete; and each 
number again abstract, and their applied measures concrete — 
abstract of one two or three, and concrete of one two or three 
ounces pounds feet yards miles degrees etc. See now abstracts 
and concretes made universal or limited, or limitedly universal 
by other words conjoined adlibitum of application to thing or 
attribute— IS * *]. 

14 Definition, is the any verbal aggregation or separation 
65 



of an any how all parts of a thing or attribute to knowledge 
same, or designation of thing or attribute in a some name of 
sort repetitive equivolent or portional a some leading name con- 
taining it or them. 

All, a definition general or particular of thing or attribute, 
and constructive analytic or designative — designative definition, 
the any predication of name samely, or translation of it into a 
more or less familiar one. 



Of definition of parts to a whole or designated part-, ex- 
ampled in one and one (a union), defined two; One fourth and 
one fourth (united), defined one half; All molecular vibrations 
of thing capable of producing within us the sense of white, 
defined whiteness — disunited unions. 



Of a whole into its classed or individual parts-, exampled in 
a A regiment, defined same in a union of soldiers composed of 
ten companies; A company (military), defined a union of soldiers 
composed of one hundred or less men; and whiteness, defined all 
properties of thing white. 

Of a whole portional its any greater whole-, exampled in 
A man, defined an animal that cooks his food, and posesses 
greater credulousness than other animals*; Four, defined one 
half (carved out) of eight; The site of Pompeii, defined that 
portion of the earths surface immediately under M' Vesuvius, 
and still containing the ruins of that city. Of a disunited whole 
set out in all or most its portions apply of a basic whole-, see 
definitions of our dictionaries to words alternate their different 
applications of meaning. [1@@, 15 A u\. 



Of a whole in other or same words-, exampled in All four 
legged animals, defined quadrupeds, or vice versa; A man de- 
fined a human being, or vice versa; A child defined a child; 
Virtue defined goodness, or vice versa; That man going there 
(or the man living at 1213 Paseo) designated John Doe, or 
vice versa — John Doe of recognition simply, is an identification 
only. [Quite all definitions of our dictionaries, are only transla- 
tions of word into a some more or less familiar expression same, 
or different applications of their portion their whole: so of 
mathematics-, examples in arithmetic-, are but an extrication 

66 



of varied terms of factor simply or mixedly whole or part of 
entaglement. 

Of a part to its greater whole factorally attribute-, exam- 
pled qualitively in color, denned that part of all kinds of mole- 
cular activity in nature that produces or can produce within us 
the sense of sight — (concretely definable, the colored qualities 
of all kinds of opaque objects) ; and whiteness, defined the white 
kind or color — (concretely definable The white properties (mole- 
cular vibrations) of all white objects) ; and of the concrete in- 
dividual in White defined same in any individual quality (3) or 
qualities of whiteness it (white) may describe of any thing or 
things designated: also of number-, in the factors Two and 
three of the number fine, defined (designated) Two fifths and 
three fifths of five disunited so; the factors of Four multiplied 
by two plus three minus one divided by two, defined (same in) 
One fourth of two multiplied by ten divided by five plus four-, 
a manipulated sameness of number — (so of any other manipula- 
tion of a number same in amount) ; The square root of one 
hundred and five thousand plus one half its self, is the one fifth 
of what number: — the latter an indetermined amount defined 
"What number". [Definitions are proven true when that of a 
predicate or substitute, is found indiscriminately same with that 
of its subject or substituted leader other]. 

RECOGNITION AND DISCRIMINATION. 

15a Classification, is determinate or indeterminate recog- 
nition of thing or attribute by determinate or indeterminate like- 
ness or resemblance of the individuals presented to a general 
memory of their kind or amount in experience. 

Classificaiton of a thing not more explicit, always classed 
a something by abstraction a general memory widest of things 
indefinitely a. coherence causing or do — classification impossible 
without two terms,- the general of experience, and a particular 
or particulars to know by the experience — see incomprehension 
of strange objects for illustration, and the sensations of infan- 
tile existence without a know until repeated sufficiently to learn; 
also the impossibility quite of conveying thoughts of a civilized 
man to that of an aboriginal. 

m Of classification recognitive, exampled of the any acts 
of recognition to following illustrations: — These two animals 
here and that flock there, are, (are not, or maybe are or are 
not) sheep — (as placed in (or out) that sort of thing,- by such 
animals coinciding (or no) with other known individuals of that 

67 



kind and name identified in general memory — (and as a one 
instance of ail individuals recognized (or no) sheep) : This 
here and those there also, are white — (as placed in that attri- 
bute of color by its or their colors coinciding with other gen- 
erally remembered individuals possessing that kind of opacity 
named white: This stuff here, is sweet,- sure enough — (as 
placed in that sort of attribute by its taste coinciding with other 
collections of taste remembered sweet: This painful feeling I 
am now suffering, is that called a dull toothache — (as placed 
in that sort of pain by it a feeling coinciding with other re- 
membered instances of that sort of pain called a dull toothache: 
Those sounds I now hear (a collection of repetitions), are that 
of violin music — (as placed in that sort of sound,- by remem- 
bered sensations named such of experience — and so of all kinds 
of sound) : The smell of those flowers is very fragrant — (etc 
of all kinds and intesities of smell) : The weight of that load 
of coal, was two tons — ( as placed in that species of amount 
by such coinciding with a weight symbolized two tons) : My 
distance to town (Independence), is seven miles — (as placed in 
that distance (of amount and kind of amount) by such a dis- 
tance of place coinciding with a general estimate called seven 
miles) : Very systematic in behavior he was — (a collection of 
doitive things classed systematic behavior in general apprehen- 
sion) : Its habits of life, are mostly nocturnal — (a colection of 
characteristics put in a collection nocturnal) : They are not of 
a same kind at all: Not a thousand all told: These chemicals 
here (a collection of differing individuals belonging to differing 
species resembling in family likeness), are acids — (as placed 
in those sorts of thing by sign properties manifest to sense in 
that of turning vegetable blues red) : The distance of the sun 
from the earth, is ninety two millions of miles — as placed in 
that quantity of kind (miles) by the sun subtending an angle 
of measure making it ninety two millions of miles distant,- a 
one here of all such distances named ninety two million miles — 
a classification by inference: & [See things classed green blue 
light smooth rough harsh musical pleasant gloomy palatable 
nauseous fragrant stinking great little high low round square 
long short complicated simple wide narrow part present future 
ancient modern medevial glacial carboniferous winter summer 
spring last month yesterday night morning noon 9 A M etc of 
all classification particular to knowledge. [For classification 
namely and propositional-, see 8 n n, 12]. 

n Of classification general-, see same a part of species 
(9*) or collection of species placed in its species or collection 

68 



of species a part of itself, or species whole or smaller collec- 
tions of species, placed in a larger collection containing it or 
them and more — (7) : — see of inference a conceived portion 
placed into a class with the perceived portion or other conceived 
portion (9*) or portions a species or collection of them: also 
see hawk and bird or horse and quadruped, classed animals, and 
caravan wagon boat car and other transfer of thing, classed 
transportation: Also all species of know or their minor col- 
lections, classed recognition or discrimination, and these again 
classed knowledge: all differing feelings of appreciation or dis- 
turbance in sort classed emotion, and all feeling motor or re- 
strain of do classed volition: all divisions of do, classed labor, 
and all divisions of means potential to labor and other function 
joined, classed capital, and these again, classed wealth. Etc etc 
of all divisions of nature and art, classed Thing, and their at- 
tributes of sort, classed form quality quantity place or time,- as 
fine severalties of alternation called attribute: — see this alter- 
nate of attributes reversed in constructive definition — 14, 1 x. 
1@±). 

Of classification conception to inference of thing in sort 
under vested power-, the following example will illustrate all of 
them: — The makers of our Constitution, and the Supreme Court 
in the Legal Tender Decisions, declare constitutional the power 
of Congress to make money, and "regulate its value thereof"; 
here is a bill before Congress calling for the make of Legal 
Tender Notes, and the issue of Silver Certificates, and the regu- 
lation of the value of silver to gold therein — therefore this bill 
before Congress (by coincidence of this measure with constitu- 
tional powers vested in Congress), is constitutional. [Major and 
middle terms here, are the terms general and particular to 
clasification, and the third one to information]. 



* Other animals than man classify identify or discrimin- 
ate of the higher, and classify (avoid or select) of the lower — 
all this relating mostly to food mating master danger approval 
or disapproval. Also many animals have a few expressions for 
their wants recognitions dangers defenses etc sensational or 
authoritative (infective), and often a too great a reliance on 
their inferences of variable experience — all involving memory 
of a greater or less degree. [Man the only animal that defines 
his knowledge, reasons from premises of necessity, and per- 
sists in beliefs of sort against common sense — of the latter, as 
necessity or other premis, "an angel of light when pressed into 
his own services," and a "bride of darkness" when used against 
him" — see 60 here, Feticism Spirits Mythology Witchcraft Prov- 
idence, Volitional love (3 $ $ ) , etc against nature, and rest- 
ing solely an authority]. 

69 



Of negative classifications conceptive to inference under 
general propositions of thing in vested power-, exampled as fol- 
lows: — by the Constitution of the United States-, the powers of 
Congress, are limited to that of the Constitution (Amend' 1791 
Art' 9,- Story), and shall not be construed to deny or to dis- 
parage others retained by the people; again-, by the Constitu- 
tion-, no powers are granted to Congress to demonetize gold or 
silver — (only to coin it, and regulate the value of silver to gold) ; 
here is an act of Congress demonetizing silver at our mints — 
therefore thi sact of Congress, is unconstitutional. [For vested 
power or ruling indeterminate-, see instances of a court of law 
or other appeal] 

Of classifications conceptive of thing to inference under sev- 
eral propositions of legislative authority-, exampled as follows: 

— Bt it enacted by the general assembly of the State of 

that any person committing an act of trespass, shall upon con- 
viction thereof by due process of law be judged guilty of a 

misdemeanor, and fined a sum of not less than nor more 

than ; here is a person that has been found guilty (by 

an any greater to less intrication of evidence extricated) of an 
act of trespass by due proces of law — (classification by evi- 
dence in factors concertly accumulative and critical of examina- 
tion) : — therefore this person is guilty of a misdemeanor, and 

subject to a fine of not less than nor more than : 

vice versa, not guilty of a misdemeanor nor subject to a fine of 

by classification negative of the law in evidence. [See 

here clasification in rulings of procedure]. 

* The major term in declaration of authority but declares 
a something as that concerted or not in major terms proposition; 
the middle term, is but an inclusion or exclusion (positive or 
negative classification by a whatever simplicity or complexity 
of evidence) of a one or more individuals included or excluded 
of the major terms subject — (all as by likeness or not of the 
individuals to the major terms meaning in proposition) : and the 
minor term, but declares of the middle term a there implied 
assertion of it as that asserted of it and all other individuals 
in or not of the major terms predicate. 

n n Of prepossessions in sort to classifications same of 
opportunity-, see all beliefs and do Romanish Democrat Socialist 
etc classed true right or best within, and all others classed un- 
true wrong or no good. [66] 

n Of other classifications abbreviated-, exampled of all 
things classed walking coming going running sitting sleeping 
rising, slow quick high low, bad good, nice ugly, pleasant un- 
pleasant, soft hard smooth rough, long short wide narrow, 

70 



branched flared, indefinite plain, virtuous vicious, brave cow- 
ardly, sweet bitter, savory unsavory, fragrant stinking, sure 
doubtful, trustful unreliable, wonderful insignificant awful etc; 
%, 1, 2, 3, 4, A, B, C, D, X, Y etc; cubical turbineal vibratory 
locomotive prehensive fly crawl etc; wooly hairy bare etc; a 
heresy or no individually political religious etc of any time and 
place of discussion (intricate classification) to settlement of 
classification; a judgment or opinion to judgment whether or 
not sound wrong judicious vicious or other; distinctions, natural 
artificial real imaginary etc; hot warm cool cold blustering etc. 
[For classification under prepossessions of sort (a major term)-, 
see assent and dissent to that for or against a some prepossessed 
sentiment of sort partisan sectarian capitalistic laboristic educa- 
tional avocation deference cure race or custom: also classifica- 
tion of knowledge to objective selection or rejection of want or 
don-t want, and approval or disapproval of like or dislike. 

15b Identification, is the any recognition of thing or at- 
tribute in sensation memory or conception as same with that a 
some original. 

Sensation particular of activities oi times instance (objects 
fleeting), or new or forgotten coherences (objects stable), are 
not identified,- but classified: — thus the sun moon, some of the 
stars, their positions of direction, and the whole heavens in sen- 
sation-, we identify; while with most of the stars and solar or 
lunar times in sensation-, we clasify: so of familiar objects or 
friends about us-, we identify by appearance of them samely a 
whole, and classify when strange: of the factors to gruop fa- 
miliar-, we identify a some to more of them when not too nearly 
alike, and classify when many or closely alike: — thus of a grove 
field fence roadway or surrounding familiar to us-, we identify 
some of the factors to grove fence roadway or surrounding, and 
classify the remainders of notice: of a familiar section of a 
railway track or sidewalk for instance-, we identify the concert 
whole, and classify the factors (ties rails tile brick boards curb 
etc) when not marked in some way discriminative to others: 
so of the old clock on the shelf-, we ever identify it as a whole, 
and classify its hourly and minute indices of time a day. Iden- 
tification of looked for objects unknown to sensation, is by de- 
scription mark or name — (classified when intruded of correcting 
mistake) : of unidentified objects we pass of occasion-, we classify 
them of a first sensation, and identify them of a remembrance 
or see of them afterwards. Of inability to classify or identify 
definitely-, see indefiniteness of comprehension in strange or un- 
familiar objects, and want of experience to restored sight — 

71 



Carpenter 619. Remembrance or conception, is but an identifica- 
tion of that immediately in internal sensation (8) as same to 
that an original reality once in sensation, or never in sensation 
at all]. 

15c Discrimination, is distinction of kind or amount be- 
tween two or more terms of thing or attribute separately whole 
or part to general or particular recognition. 

m Discrimination, exampled of any comparisons of thing 
or attribute as generally or particularly same alike different 
resembling equal x:y unequal brighter brightest, louder loudest, 
harder hardest, sweeter sweetest, better best worse, sounder 
soundest, slower slowest, higher highest, sunnier sunniest, more 
or less, wiser wisest, or as so many different individuals in 
recognition only. [So of coalesce terms in classification and 
identification discriminated distinct when reflectively compared 
together, and differences so in the feelings of sensation remem- 
brance conception motive volition like dislike etc; also discrim- 
inations of thing form quality distance direction area length 
breadth thickness degree weight number pound ton yard past 
present future from each other, and above below, here there, 
farther nearer, beyond etc, and discrimination itself from recog- 
nition and classification from identification **. 

** Of recognition touching two or more terms in primary 
discrimination-, see to and from, a recognized something passing 
extending or continuing between two recognized and discrim- 
inated terms, or a something taken or added respect another 
term recognized and discriminated; in, a recognized location of 
something or attribute within a portion a recognized and dis- 
criminated that containing it; out, a recognized position exter- 
ior that a recognized other something discriminated; of, a por- 
tion of a recognized that its whole primarily distinguished; 
thorough, a. means or a recognized that a passing or extending 
in and out to a that containing it for the time being; by, a 
location aside or an instrumentality connect of thing or attri- 
bute with other thing or attribute recognized and discriminated 
in terms. [Discrimination and distinction, interchangable words. 
For other recognition and discrimination-, see that to before 
after concomitant obverse aside behind along beyond opposite 
between right left first second beginning end today yesterday last 
week etc. See all parts to a whole, a recognition and discrim- 
ination of factors apart or as elements to a whole in distinc- 
tion. Test of discriminate expression, is an any distinction 
whatever between an any two or more express or implied terms 
of co-existence or sequence juxtaposedly recognized and com- 
pared — see positive negative or indeterminate connection of 
cause and effect ever a matter of discrimination in expression, 
and the juxtaposed distinction of the circumscription in words 
names and proportions a limiting of each other — 13]. 

72 



AXIOMS OF SAMENESS LIKENESS DIFFER- 
ENCE AND RESEMBLANCE. 

16a Things or attributes of thing (1, 2, 3, U) 
coincident of comparison, are same or like as same- 
ness to nnsameness or likeness to unlikeness existing 
in the terms compared * *. [minute nnsameness and 
likeness and unlikeness here of practice, are sup- 
pressed] . 

** What before has been perceived coincident in form 
quality place or time, has by closer scrutiny been discriminated 
as of a some degree of concomitant unsameness or incoin- 
cidence: — therefore from this an elaborated experience without 
exception-, it is infered that there are no individuals absolutely 
same or alike $$ in all comparisons — sameness and unsameness 
and coincidence and incoincidence only remaining of absolute 
facts (a)(5). [Hence all molecules and atoms elementary of 
matter are never exactly in a same condition to each other in all 
time; and hence the impossibility of an all repeated sameness 
absolute of all matter and force, and an ever continuation of a 
some sort of change adinfinitum.] 

$$ Of sameness or likeness in sort, all as something mas- 
sive molecular or atomic added gone or varied in some form or 
way between their times of comparison, ["Yet in this number 
26250 days that compose these seventy years, one day produces 
nothing exactly same as the other" — Herodotus.] 

@@ See in this imperfect duplication of things an ever 
differing change of temperature concomitant and sequent a what- 
ever resultant alteration of function in elements (27, 23, 25) 
supply and forms integrating, and concomitant loss of old or 
gain of new elements or function: — all as persistent variations 
of force in elements (11 Ann) from temperatures preorganically 
high (29) to crystallization stratification vegetation and animal 
life initiatory, and other changes develop conserve deplete and 
extinct in suitableness to unsuitableness of temperature and 
element changed — see variation and extinction of species north 
and south their prevailing centers of temperature and element 
plethora. Plenetary origin of life then, the any first elementary 
unions of organic and inorganic substance (30sc) specific an 
any arriving temperatures suitable to their any cellular organi- 
zation then natural, and a farther integrative selection of these 
a widening concert of cells in other temperatures collectively 
coincident (23*1, 16*) and diversificatory then by nature. [See 
Prof. Standfasts Experiments with Caterpillars, and Hertwig 
on cells. By the spontaneous reaching out and assimilation 
of the new without generative impress-, life quite surely sets 
up its beginnings the any where and when the laws of element 
and temperature concretly determine — primary admixtures, 
solar— 29.] 

73 



•I In lawful activity-, struggle self sustaining or more, is 
self conserving or more; struggle non self sustaining or destruc- 
tive of dependence, is an elimination of dependence self or both: 
struggle primary and above vital consumption, is accumulation 
or parasitic succor; struggle primary and below vital function 
and continueing, is self and parasitic conservation. [43. See 
crime vagrancy idleness tortion contention insurance official- 
ism and other depletive function a load on a more than self 
sustaining industry self and other (43$) of time and place]. 



Of earlier geological change in a firstly preorganic climate 
(29), and the phenomena of fossil trees (later) protruding 
upwards in strata above, and successive roots alike still embedded 
in strata 1400 feet deep, and tracks of animals still an imprint 
in stone etc-, its seems very likely that exposed stratas at those 
times were greatly plastic or clayey substances to great erosions 
and strong solutions result of cateclysmal condensations of 
active vapors then to supply of other rapid formations and slight- 
er annealments same: — hardening later in pressures and lower- 
ing temperatures set of their rapidly absorbed lime silica (or not 
of some) etc to slow dissolution or erosion again when exposed 
in its time to atmospheric water and more resistant tempera- 
tures. Also from rapid embryonic development (25) comparative 
with after growth, and unusual activities in great developments 
of knowledge or reformation past, and industrial art present 
to slower change afterwards-, it seems quite likely that early 
life was organically of a very short evolution to succeeding 
change nearly conservative — change of function in organs 
developed, a matter of new afferency reflexion volition (25) 
muscularity or means incident of new nervousness (11 A * z, 25) 
or knowledge, and coordinative ability. Greater change, a 
concert excitement; conservatism unmolested, an indifference — 
"How is it that while subject to papacy we prayed so often and 
with such favor, whilst now we pray with almost coldness and 
very seldom" — Luther's wife to Martin Luther. Of strata in 
early formation dependent upon solution and water transporta- 
tion, it follows that there could have been no stratification until 
crystallic formation had furnished a supply of elevated material, 
and reduced surrounding temperatures to point of vapor con- 
densation continued until all vapor repellent of former heat 
internal had been condensed to water and its absorbent play in 
air (unrepelent) , and rainfall after to now — hence all seas 
lakes and oceans would at first have formed by a long gainingly 
repeated down pour of water and reacting steam long ages 
before a more highly concerted vegetation and life could have 
existed. Hence planetary existence, a beginning in tempera- 
tures first producing crystallization of mineral substance, and 
an evolving of things suiting the any lowering temperatures 
after to dissolution of masses in unantithetical temperatures too 
cold for seamed and stratified substances to longer hold together 
by magnetic impulse gone — in our system, a massive dissolution 
planetary beyond Neptune. [29. Compare condition and 
properties of all known substances at any range of higher 
temperatures than now.] 

74 



Individual things or attributes, are same or alike as same- 
ness or likeness of their factors (parts) arranged of concomit- 
ancy or sequence in distance direction dimension weight density- 
energy velocity inertia number place or time (11 B n *) apart 
or whatever way combined in the factors of term to term 
compared. 

m Of general likeness of kind or amount general 
of any single or grouped species of expression in terms 
of comparison-, exampled as follows: — equals added 
or taken from equals (each a species), produce other 
equals ^; The squares of the hypotenuse of all right 
angled triangles (that of all sizes), are (respectively) 
equal to the squares of their sides; The angle of re- 
fraction, is always equal to the angle of incidence; 
The individuals of a species only, are alike each other ; 
Man is mortal,- or man will not live in the flesh for- 
ever; The diurnal and annual motions of a planet, 
are respectively alike in form and magnitude; Repe- 
tition of a dancer's or walker's movements, are alike,- 
or of a same kind of motions and equipoises. & [For 
other illustrations of specific likeness observe, the re- 
peated movements and equilibriums of any peculiar 
or other habits of men — character of an individual, 
is essentially a nexus of specific habits of conduct. 
Characteristics of sort, are distributive in the dif- 
ferent individuals, and repetitive in a same individual 
— (but as with the likeness of the instances in the in- 
dividual closer than that between the individuals) : — 
observe the very close likeness of the repeated move- 
ments and poises of a dancer's rhythms in clog, with 
noticeable differences between his and his partner's 
repetitions same in clog — hence applause where their 
skill of differences, are scarcely perceptible. For an- 
other instance-, carefully sense the factoral manipu- 
lations of the thumb and fingers (habit) in buttoning 
a garment ; and not quite the same performance in that 
act same of another person : Also every day habits in 
criminal detection.] 

x Of generalized likenesses characteristic of hu- 
man nature in species single or collect-, exampled as 
follows: — Evident truthfulness of a reproach, stings 
as a mortification; evident or aberrate falsity same, 
75 



an exasperation: & Iterate ado example and say so 
mountain high (11 A ^ &) , has subordinated man- 
kind into opinionate and authoritative subjections of 
sort greatly obstinate of hold, and proscriptive of 

others f. 

With most of mankind assent to things of belief 
or disbelief that accord with some like dislike or en- 
thusied notion of sort, is given with a relish or little 
or no question to the contrary ; and vice versa-, dissent 
to things of belief or disbelief that conflict with any 
some like dislike or enthusied notion of sort, is given 
with a relish or little or no question to the contrary 
— (see partisan and other assent or dissent, and their 
misrepresentations or vilifications of each other re- 
ceived with a vim, and little or no question of truth- 
fulness or untruthfulness — (15 n n) ; vice versa, all 
anger and all question) : That his political or religious 
beliefs are absolutely true (11 A * &) and all opposing 
beliefs, are absolutely false, is as a self evident truth 
with every enthusiastically or bitterly partisan sec- 
tarian or hobied mind : Few men of the present, pos- 
sess qualified or indeterminate judgments about most 
things in the political world about which most men 
have strongly positive or negative convictions — (See 
judgments such absent in most partisan declarations 
past to present) : & & The masses of mankind, have 
never ruled the world, and never will — (they only ac- 
quiesce as a so many geared factors in a some senti- 
mental balance wheel set agoing and kept agoing 
somehow of the anyhow by the any successful formu- 
lators and manipulators of public opinion (11 B n) ,- 
engrafting or varying sentiment of the any time and 
place) || : 



t "It was useless to argue with her: — arguments have 
no chance against petrified training — (they wear as little as the 
waves wear a cliff) ; and her training was everybody's train- 
ing. [Clemens. With most infective do and think-, a long or 
wide repeated do or say is taken with no thought of a reason 
why or a suspicion of the need of one: — see beliefs and ado 
widely prevalent or reaching back into antiquity — prestige of 
crowd or old organization, a sufficient guarantee of a falsity 
in fact being a truth or a right in belief — 10 x.] 

76 



jj "The smaller farmers mechanics merchants and 
laborers (this class will probably number three fourths of the 
whole), have in fact no real interest in the establishment of 
the Southern Confederacy; and have been led or driven into the 
war on the false theory that they were to be benefitted some 
how they knew not xxx. These are the tiers etat of the South, 
and are hardly worthy of thought,- for they swerve to and fro 
according to events which they do not comprehend, or attempt 
to shape. When the time for rceonstruction comes-, they [the 
politicians] will want the old political system of caucuses legis- 
latures etc to amuse them and make them believe they are real 
sovereigns: but in all things they will follow blindly the lead 
of the planters. The southern politicians who understand this, 
class them as the French do their masses, and seemingly consult 
their prejudices while they make their own orders and enforce 
them" oo. [Sherman's Memoirs]. 

"xxx The question of tariff reform must be urged through 
the organization known as the Democrat Party; and the ques- 
tion of protection with Reciprocity, must be forced to public 
view through the Republican Party: — by thus dividing the voters 
we can get them to expend their energies in fighting each other 
over other questions of no importance to us except as tethers 
to lead of the common herd". ["A Wall Street Dispatch dated 
March 21, 1892". Later: eating with a negro now (1904-5), 
and 3,000,000 square miles of newspaper cackle, a politico-wall 
street blinder kindle of hate north south, and a flattering pull of 
negro votes t !!•] 

"The Roman people like sheep, were xx as those that can 
scarce be brought to stir singly, but all in a body — (8 n n z) 
readily follow their leaders" @@. "The men whose council you 
would not take individually, lead you with ease in a crowd". 
"The Athenians govern the Greeks, I govern the Athenians. 
[Themistocles in Cato the Censor of Plutarch]. 

"His intention was to restrain the unlimited power of the 
popular administration,- which cannot be properly called a gov- 
ernment, but as Plato terms it a ware house of governments" 
[Dion in Plutarch]. 

"Why do we make that a contest between patricians and 
plebeians which ought to be between the state and one pestilent 
citizen". [Usury against Manlius of Livy]. 

"What an idea: — a republic of thirty million of people with 
our morals our vices; how is such a thing possible. The nation 
wants a chief — a chief covered with glory, not theories of gov- 
ernment phrases ideological essays that the French do not un- 
derstand. They want some plaything — (that will be enough) ; 
they will play with them and let themselves be led, supposing 
they are cleverly prevented from seeing the goal towards which 
they are moving". [Napoleon Bonaparte]. 

" "The basis of our governments being the opinions of the 
peoDle-, the very first object should be to keep it right 1 '. [Jef- 
ferson]. 

"All history resolves itself very easily into the biography 
of a few stout and earnest persons". [Emerson]. 

77 



"That part of town to the west of London, is the quarter of 
London which spends money, makes laws, and regulates the 
fashions". [Baedekers London]. 

Of the Roman Hierarchy-, the Cardinals make the Popes, 
the Popes make the Cardinals, and the whole Roman Catholic 
Church is moved by a button x x pressed in Rome: — the Pope 
presses his button, and the Cardinals are moved; the Cardinals 
pres their buttons, and the Bishops are moved; the Bishops and 
Priests, theirs and the people are moved; but the people have no 
buttons — theirs is to obey and nourish the church. [Prof. Sims 
revised by the author]. 

oo "Desirous to make his high office as well as himself 
rather agreeable than formidable to the people-, he ordered the 
axes [an emblem of subjection] to be taken away from the rods, 
and that whenever he went to the assembly the rods should be 
availed in respect to the citizens (flattery arrogative and aver- 
tive) as if the supreme power were lodged in them". The peo- 
ple were not aware by this he did not lessen his power (as they 
imagined), but only by such an instance of moderation obviated 
and cut off all ocasion of envy; and gained as much authority 
to his person as he seemed to take from his office — for they all 
submitted to him with pleasure, and were so much charmed with 
him behavior (flattery) that they gave him the name of Pub- 
licola — that is, the people's respectful friend". Balerius in Plu- 
tarch, and the modern demagogue]. 

t || See in this (those that can see) corporate and official 
power over a truckling subsidized press to throw into paroxysms 
of rage or other an eighty millions of self devouring people so 
adroitly tended by a cunning few as to at any desired moment 
crucify themselves and helpless others foster defend or paliate 
an any rascally scheme of hidden principals and party leaders. 

@@ The following extract from Raulinson's Ancient Per- 
sia, and the bracket work interlined by the author, illustrates 
this abjectness of the masses to their leaders stil unchanged 
other than change of leaders in kind: — "The feeling of the 
Persian towards his king, is one of which moderns can with 
difficulty form a conception — in Persia the monarch [now party 
leader] was so much the state that patriotism itself was as it 
were swallowed up in loyalty [party now], and an aboslute un- 
questioning submission, not only to the deliberate will but the 
merest caprice of the sovereign [now party leader], was by 
habit and education so engrained into the nature of the people 
that a contrary spirit scarcely ever manifested itself". 

The popular will of the masses of mankind in poli- 
tics and religion always have and ever will subtend 
this and that set of political or religious teachers and 
leaders of herd with little other judgment about them 
and principle than herd-name popular (preposses- 
sions), and sweet morsel declarations partisan or sec- 
tarian — (15 n n) : Most leaders of society in motive 
and conduct, are firstly prompted by a selfish desire 

78 



for some greatly to less agreeable and remunerative 
place in the world's demand (as cozy effort pay and 
notoriety) , and secondly, are principled and organized 
with a some set of remunerating doctrines and form- 
ula * @ that somewhere disguises a quite unrequited 
duty in the dull succoring many, and a considerable 
to a very remunerative right in the bright and favored 
few $ : 



*@ "Draped in many lands as lowly faith; but ever jug- 
gling souls with rites and prayers", and "keeper of those keys 
which lock up hells, and open heavens". [11 c x <£]. 

$ "If the reverent fathers (said he) loved good cheer and 
soft lodging-, a few miles riding, would bring them to the Priory 
of Brainxwick x x x; or if they preferred spending a peniten- 
tial evening-, they might turn down yonder wilder glade which 
would bring them to the hermitage of copmanhurst. The Prior 
shook his head: — my honest friend (said he)-, we churchmen do 
not exhaust each others hospitality, but rather require that of 
the laity — giving them thus the opportunity to serve God in 
honoring and relieving His appointed servants". [Portions of 
Protestantism, are not entirely free of this, but the body in 
main is the only organization that seems sincerely to be trying 
to make men morally better]. 

"Worthy father (answered the knight)-, here is a poor 
wanderer bewildered in these woods who gives thee an oppor- 
tunity of exercising thy charity and hospitality: good brother 
(replied the inhabitant of the hermitage)-, it has pleased Our 
Lady St. Dunstan to destine me for the object of those virtues 
instead of the exercise thereof". ["Long flourish the sandal the 
cord and the cope, the dread of the devil and trust of the Pope; 
for to gather lifes roses unscathed by the briar, is granted alone 
to the barefooted friar". &A best religion, is that a system of 
belief ceremony and emotion collective a best behavior and hu- 
man enjoyment. Reorganized and unionized Protestantism-, 
here countenanced to this end — (60) : its spirit, a common sense 
admixture of sincere friendliness amenableness mirthfulness 
reverence hopefulness and sympathy — the funeral spirit of the 
past to be substituted by an easy hopefulness indicative more of 
joy than fear or suffering — see Gates Ajar by Mrs. Phillips, and 
the Salvationists of our cities a starting thought [God in earth, 
not an implacable god of vengeance and funerals, but a king of 
joy and hope]. 

& Of all fools existent of any time and place 
("educated" and uneducated)-, the biggest fool is the 
suffraged fool that enthusiastically fleeces himself with 
helpless others to pamper a hidden principal or set 
of party leaders, and don't know it, and don't want to 
know it — (11 E CJ) : z z In most complaint of excuse 
of the ills of labor poverty reform or other ill of hap- 

79 



pen-, the ills of grievance lie wholly within the sub- 
jects of complaint or excuse, and the causes wholly 
without * ^ — (exceptional is the man that can place 
a wrong in himself party sect or other herd of sort as 
cause of it) : With most conservators of any condi- 
tion of things-, right lies wholly within the any some 
superior advantages arrogated to conservatism, and 
offense wholly those praying for reform @ : 



*«fl "Then among them spake Agamemnon king of men 
x x x: Oh Damaan friends and heroes, men of Acres company 
x x x, to the son of Pelus I declare myself x x x: — oft have 
the Ackaians spoken thus and upbraided me; but it is not I who 
am the cause, but Zeus and Destiny and Erinys that walk in the 
darkness who put into my soul fierce madness on the day when 
in the assembly I even I bereft Archilles of his meed [Illiad] 

"And here is Mr. Micawber without any suitable position or 
employment: where does that responsibility rest — clearly on 
society. Then I would make a fact so disgraceful known, and 
boldly challenge society to set it right". ["Mrs. Micawber"] 

@ Among greater minds for this law-, see Matterneck's 
Professions of Political Faith Principles and Means (Matterneck 
Memoirs) , Bismarck's Denunciation of Radicalism and European 
Democracy and other conservators of older things comfortable 
of effort and agreeable to assimilation. [11 c x &]. 

Most prophecies presentiments and prognostica- 
tions of sort, are but so many foolish forecasts of ig- 
norance and imposture that are remarked about mag- 
nified and remembered when casually come true, and 
unmentioned depreciated and forgotten when usually 
come false: With many people-, a casual piece of re- 
markable expertness or success (as fortunate general- 
ship knight errantry or other luck), is attributed an 
act of great skill or sagacity: With most people-, the 
law of natural recovery usual from sickness, is yet at- 
tributed an antecedent potion and consequent cure 
labeled onto nature (a libel) by persistent ignorance 
of the stupid, and a variably remunerative affirmation 
or assent of the professional: & & The power that 
dominates the any persistently iterated subjects of 
the press school and rostrum (subsidized endowed or 
bought) in any or all its divisions of influence (wig 
wag of interest), formulates and controls the senti- 
ments of the individuals composing the any divisions 
herd of that influence — (see politics in this of late) : 

80 



"Behold the child by natures kindly law, pleased with 
a rattle tickled with a straw; some livelier plaything 
his youth delights, — a little louder but as empty quite; 
scarfs garters gold amuse a riper stage, and beads 
and prayer books are the toys of age ; pleased with the 
bauble still as that before till tired he sleeps, and lifes 
poor play is o'er" : The popularity of many men (in- 
dividual or class), depends more upon prepared f * 
or infective eulogies of their writings or public doings 
of sort by men in factional push than merit in the 
man or men — see Jesuitical and political parade and 
push of leaders into popular notice ; also many historic 
characters factionally or nationally lending prestige. : 



+* "As St Arnards name was not yet familiar in Paris-, 
a campaign was arranged in the summer of 1851 for the purpose 
of wining him distinction: at the cost of some hundreds of 
lives-, St Arnard was pushed into sufficient fame; and after 
receiving congratulations proportioned to his exploits from the 
presidents own hand he was summoned to Paris in order at the 
right moment to be made minister of war". Fiffs Modern Eu- 
rope. For popularity by panegyric-, see newspaper popularity 
of many men partisan of our day,- and secretly premeditated in 
many ways by others in authority. See theological push past to 
great notoriety now giving away to the political taking its place 
apart] . 



The unpopularity of not a few men of public men- 
tion, depends more upon a want of notice, or dispar- 
agement of their works or acts as authors or public 
officials by men that have the popular ear than want 
of merit in their writings or official doings — (largely 
independent) : Most men of the present in verification 
of an opinion of theirs on social or other subjects, or 
estimates of character, very assiduously cull out all 
strong particulars or generalities made to accord with 
their conclusions of social thing or personal character, 
and as carefully suppress or explain away all partic- 
ulars or generalities in conflict with the same — (see 
this in political or religious character and conflict of 
changed or existing creed) ; Vice versa-, most men 
of an attack of anothers opinion about social subjects, 
or estimate of character, very assiduously cull out to 
view all particulars and generalities in real or con- 
strued conflict with the conclusion of attack, and as 

81 



assiduously suppress or explain away all things that 
substantiate them — (see partisan or sectarian attack) : 
Most men can no more make a candid estimate of an 
adversaries position in politics or religion than dark- 
ness can emit light: The gift of the artist depends 
upon his selection of subjects to please (variable), 
and naturalness of the representation — (hence of 
Dickens-, Miss Betsey's blow of her bonnet at Mr. 
Chilips head (an unobtrusive stranger), is very over- 
drawn because so very unnatural ; but when she in her 
spite puts on her bonnet bent-, the scene becomes very 
amusing because so very natural to feeling: Also the 
dying words of Barkis (as the actual of Hume) pall 
on the mind by death bed jesting extremely unnatural; 
but their iterations on other occasions, are very illus- 
trative of good natured imbecility) : The event of a 
battle often depends more on the morale or casual 
flurry of courage or fear in the soldiers than skill or 
want of skill in the commander — (hence often-, the 
uncertainty of the result of a battle usual, and conse- 
quent estimate of its commander — in this hero enforce- 
ment of personal character, large battles or brisk skir- 
mishes as the nature of the war determines climax, 
seems of the present at least to be little distinguished 
between — see Manila late) : Most men of occasion 
readily .praise or justify within themselves or friends 
what of other occasions and circumstances they as 
readily condemn in others their enemies — as often in- 
cluding down right dishonesty, politico- banditti-sav- 
agery, red , or usual crime,- personal parti- 
san laboristic religious etc f % : 



tfl See in this approval or condonement of disreputable 
doing in political primary, trial of blood relation, investigation 
of unscrupulous leaders, and defence praise or esteem of barbaric 
heroes to fiery revenge — instance in the later John Brown (an 
underground negro lifter) and abolition worship north, and 
Quantrell (a chased away horse thief) and bandit worship south: 
— the later, an unrelentent "Border Ruffian" hero worship 
(£ @ &) rooted in dazzling daring, and a gratifying revenge 
inhumanly savage a border trouble terror and murder-, yet sweet 
to memories of much old and succeeding southern sentiment; and 
that now after thirty five years of progressive change, is still a 
public recommend to official education^ or other preferment: of 
the former, a hero worship still a song of praise in abolition 
sentiment north-, for a philanthropic madman crazed in murder 
and insurrection revenge a border wrong at home, and chattel 

82 



slavery approaching. [See Roman Catholic Mahometan Anglican 
and Turkish approval and hedge of hate in wholesale butcheries 
committed and sustained in the propagation and preservation of 
their intolerating religions — (apology now and a quieter eat of 
the fruits, the policy) : and "Liberty Oh Liberty! how many 
crimes have been committed in thy name". See further-, walls 
of national hate built upon recriminations of war and trade — 
(otherwise-, alliances of fear and interest in favors of act or 
influence, flatteries of praise or deference, and advantages of 
trade or protection) : also hedge of sectarianism, in recrimina- 
tions polemical proscriptive and persecutional. Later: see ap- 
plause in a New York court for fraud and bribery maintain of 
gold standard; and same in a New York Legislature approve 
millionaire rascality slip an insurance fraud running into mil- 
lions]. 

Most tracts, pamphlets, books, public letters, edi- 
torials, etc on political religious class and other sub- 
jects past to present, are mostly only a hodgepodge of 
untruthful unproven unmeaning frivolous and exag- 
gerating or depreciating ejaculations panegyric or re- 
proachful of friend or foe: In most practiced medi- 
cine, and much surgery (tracheal abdominal and oth- 
er) however illustrious or mystic the display of the 
cult (see magazine illustrations impressive of practice 
f f, and showy advertisement)-, that the practitioners 
of such cure disease oftener than they kill the patient, 
or lengthen the lives of some more than they shorten 
that of others, is as yet a matter of unthought or ig- 
nored indemonstration : 

tt See credulous inquiry and curiosity for the seriously 
sick; display examinations incant of mystic knowledge within, 
and published symtoms spellbind of the multitude without, or re- 
ligious exercises incantively remunerative to other systematized 
avocations and looked to patronage. [Rev. Hobson and Dr. Rob- 
inson was down to the end of town a hunting together — that is-, 
I mean the doctor was shipping a sick man to the other world, 
and the preacher was pointing him right — Mark Twain. For 
display examinations and care-, see medical parade over sick 
patients locally or nationally in great repute down to the mystic 
stare of ignorance surrounding the bedside of stricken poverty]. 
Appendix Eb. 

The conceit of many men in authority over others 
(singular or collective), is quite proportional to the 
homage of constituency — (their exactions proportional 
to homage of constituency, and fear of others) : The 
paths of the proselyte suffragen and patron (greatly 
roseate dupes of revenue), are strewn with lieing- 
smiles and cheap acts of flattery — (the motive of pros- 

83 



elytism or solicitation (open and disguised), is per- 
sonal or systematic revenue patronage, notoriety or 
deference) : In most practiced medicine and phar- 
macy-, to tell the applicant that no medicine in his case 
is needed, or failure to cure his ailment, is often quite 
sure to offend him, and change his patronage — his all 
(drilled) faith in cure, and concomitant ignorance not 
to be questioned <$ *J : 



•I <I Hence placebo and quackery legion past to present. 
In the practitioners or patent medicine man's racket of cure-, 
often a good time is advised as necessary a cure or recovery of 
health — (really natural) : and when a failure takes place-, a 
change of venue to another doctor or patent medicine man, is 
usually the consequent; and when a recovery or periodic abate- 
ment of disease natural takes place-, a testimony of a sure 
enough cure is flourished into advertisement, or left to work its 
way unmolested among other manipulated fools of medicine craze 
and patronage. [Hence success of Homeopathy (the infinitesi- 
mal dose) , laying on of hands touch faith and prayer cure,- in 
that of it as soothing to fear of disease (a costly benefit), and 
as coincident with natural recovery (usual) as the practice of 
Allopathy ** — the later practice occasionally injurious or de- 
structive of life in the administration of too much opium verat- 
rum digitalis and other poisons; and more so of the old and not 
yet wholly discarded practice of bleeding mercury etc *] 

** "The method of cure practiced by the priests of Otehite, 
consists chiefly of prayers and ceremonies x x x: at the same 
time they plait leaves of the cocoanut into different figures x x x, 
and fasten them to the fingers and toes of the sick: if lie re- 
covers-, they say the remedies cured him; if he dies,- they say 
the disease was incurable — in which perhaps they do not differ 
much from "that" of other countries". [Cooks Voyages]. 

* In Rome "medical men were divided into physicians sur- 
geons and occulists x x x; dentists, specialists for diseases of 
the ear, lady physiicans for diseases of their own sex, and mid- 
wives and assistants whose chief business was to rub their pa- 
tients with medicinal ointments: also numerous sellers of Orien- 
tal salves etc who added their share to the grand system of 
quackery obtaining in Rome. Numerous physicians became [pop- 
ularly] known; one rejecting the remedies of the other, and 
seeking renown by the introduction of new emthods: — hence says 
Pliny those disgraceful squabbles at sick beds x x x, and hence 
the dreadful inscription in [Roman] tombs-, the number of his 
doctors has killed him. [Guhl and Koner Roman Antiquities]. 

84 



With most people of our day-, it is difficult to quite 
ispossible for them to comprehend that others likes 
dislikes pleasures displeasures fears etc of thing are 
not same with their own; also that there are other 
notions of things or ways of doing or having things 
familiar to them as good or possibly as good as that 
of their own good way or notion — (hence eternal 
bicker, complaint, and correction of unreasoning pre- 
sumption; see most dispute complaint and domineer 
of men individual partisan sectarian legislative and 
other: Also stickle about notions and ways of doing 
or having thing in all departments of life unverified 
as true false right wrong better or worse, and often 
foolish) : & z With most people of friendly con- 
cert-, the bare assertion of a some conceited or pro- 
found something of sort not conflicting with a some 
counteracting feeling of material like, dislike, experi- 
ence, belief, or disbelief, is usually received with little 
or no question of truthfulness nor distinction $ $ : 

$$ Hence with most people past to present-, advice or 
opinions of the conceitedly wise and truly wise, are not discrim- 
inated $ | i ; and hence difficulty of the good and wise of thought 
to counteract the advice and opinions of the deceitful in author- 
ity, and the officiously gabbling smattering multitude: — instance 
Aristides writing his own banishment on the peasants shell, and 
uttering his lament "Who can change the opinions of these peo- 
ple": also the warning voice of a few cool heads of our time 
against the demagogue and a screaming swarming and other- 
wise deluded dictation of universal suffrage and Liberty enlight- 
ening the world": also the false and over estimated knowledge 
of our schools and pulpit in conflict with common sense. For 
other unreliable frivolous and over-estimated knowledge of our 
day versus critical knowledge-, observe much other individual and 
received notions of men impromptu of common conversation and 
persistently stuck to without proof or thought of such needed: 
also gabbling newspaper reports of the day made to sell and 
arouse or entertain the prejudices of credulous people. [Of the 
later-, instance of late report after report quite exparte of 
Turkish massacre of Armenian Christians, with all protestant 
Europe and America under indignation resolution and insinua- 
tion of war, that now of Blue Book Report, critical other in- 
formation, and sober thought of a few (and not the now incor- 
rectable multitude) , turns out greatly a questionable killing of a 
some nine hundred or less unscrupulous cheats and userers of 

85 



sort called Christians — synonymous in the East with thief and 
liar, and here greatly resistent of Trukish authority.] 

$ 1 1 "I am less afraid of men who doubt their own capacity, 
than of those who think themselves fit for everything". [Em- 
peror Francis to Matterneck. A ruler of men, or a formulator 
of sentiment, can be a most damaging or a most precious piece 
of property a society can possess]. 

Of present conceit and rambling presumption con- 
voke, a majority or a plurality — (central or diffused), 
is just as sure to err of truth or right as a minority 
— (applause or no applause) : Of present state of 
natural ignorance whim and irrational education, it is 
just as possible for a majority to ramble on to a truth 
or right as a minority @ * ; and vice versa-, a mi- 
nority or plurality as a majority: Personal popularity 
of kind usually comes of a some held position popular 
of estimate (as attained by inheritance merit money 
oratory @ @ or push of sort ( f *), and iterated 
praises of the press and rostrum: 

@* Justice being a restitution or apportioning to men 
rights or things most practicably proportionate to effort and 
value (43)-, it follows that a rule of the majority, or opposition 
of a minority, is no criterion of right at all — hence not a princi- 
ple of right or just government. [See "State Sovereignty" in 
principle a selfish shambling nullification and self adjudgment in 
conflict with itself on lower or any unions of interest and nulli- 
fication basic, and ignore of all disinterested arbitrament the 
essence of righteous referee — self adjudgment, a farce or show 
of investigation and judgment exparte a predetermination — 
hence not a principle of right nor a bond of society, but a dis- 
solver of it. In strict or liberal constitutional construction-, see 
either pressed into service when coinciding or not to some inter- 
est of sort applied to it, and disregarded when not. See disso- 
lution of the Roman empire and decentralized Greece Europe 
England Ireland Scotland and other to the tribal; vice versa, 
evolution of all society.] 

@@ "The gift of eloquence, has done a great deal of mis- 
chief in parliamentary life x x x: the speeches in the house, are 
delivered for the public to show what you are capable of, and 
still more for the newspapers in the hope they may praise you. 
It will come to this yet, that eloquence will be regarded as a mis- 

86 



demeanor, and long speeches will be punishable by law. [Bis- 
marck in Busch. Oratory greatly an entertaining flattery of 
ilk or ridicule of others incant important personage (8 n n z) 
and great knowledge usually absent the gift. Oratory and mas- 
sive ignorance, a couplet of great injury to social truthand right 
— a deceit here gilded with oratory and well stuck to, is same 
as truth to motive incredulous people]. 

Of the present state of social credulity and in- 
quisitiveness anywise remunerative, every field of ism 
hobby and inquisitive thought reverence or other curi- 
osity that can be made to yield a profit to an agreeable 
effort and notoriety of sort, is assiduously cultivated 
for all thats in it, and new fields eagerly sought: By 
.great confusion of favoring or unfavoring prejudice 
ignorance bribery ambiguity technicality law and false 
sentiment slip of wrong-, justice in our courts of law 
and trial is yet a matter of great uncertainty 1 1 | : 



Hence indefinite sense of this prime cause of mob 
violence in the south, and mistrust of our courts of law and com- 
mission by many in the North — (General stupidity to change, 
baited influence and hireling selfishness of sophistical fee ex- 
panding attorney #, and plotted ambiguities and technicalities 
hidden in law prime cause of its conservation) : hence also na- 
tional and other mistrust of international and other courts or 
commissions of inquiry arbitration etc,- by farce character of 
our international or other high horse attorneys and junketing 
commissions of sort and extravagance to quite predetermined or 
conceded judgments preexisting in the sentiments or submissions 
of the parties to a desired or enforced settlement. [See "eight 
to seven" verdict over election frauds south in the yar 1876; 
also sine then and before-, in congressional and legislative in- 
vestigations of membership complexion of the party in majority: 
also Alabama claims conceded before trial, and the Venezuela 
arbitration conceded for a purpose — (now the America-Spanish 
war is on, beginning to show itself) : — irrespective of justice or 
injustice however-, law settles dispute. Of the now much parad- 
ed notions of international arbitration I and increased influence 
of attorney in legislation of the day-, the thought (classly an 
interested one), seems to prevail that if our international trou- 
bles could be turned over to varristry (greatly sophistry 11 E <J) 
all political things now and after would go on sweet scented 
and roseate forever — (11 c x &) : While the truth of the mat- 

87 



ter is, there is not a more conceity sophistical extravagant arbi- 
trary and inequitable class of men in existence (now greatly 
corporative sycophants) than the more noted judges and at- 
torneys of law politicians of our day — (on other subjects than 
law political and everyday doing, as irrational and credulous 
quite as the crowd yelping beneath them) : — see late address 
to the bar eulagistic of the power of the barrister in legisla- 
tion,- (1896) ; Also biased venal and reverse rulings or decisions 
of our higher courts of law in elimination of just considerations 
in contact, let or cover of official corporate and other slip of 
extortion and unjust monopolization, and aristocratic sacred- 
ness of judicial personage disguise of favor to wealth. [40 &, 
52 <fe]. 

# In his speech before 300 Chicago lawyers, Mr. Bryan 
handled the profession without gloves. "I believe", he said in 
concluding, "that the day will come in this country when we will 
not have so many men who wil sell their souls to make grand 
larceny possible. Perhaps some time it will not be less graceful 
for a lawyer to assist in a gigantic robbery than for a highway- 
man to go out and hold up the wayfarer. I knew of a case 
recently in which they had to go to New York to get lawyers 
to represent the people because all the lawyers available nearer 
at hand had been bought up." [1907, Dallas News]. 



With most men of our day-, there is scarcely ever 
in mind a suspicion of an any incompetency on their 
part to judge pro and con alleged merit or fact, or to 
judge justly the rights or duties of others in question 
evidence or no evidence — (try an average juryman 
reporter partisan scetarian or nationalist for illustra- 
tion of this in questions appertaining to respective 
divisions) : In quite all volitions and doings of men 
impliedly or professionally philanthropic, the motive 
lies in proselyteism, (patronage immediate or pros- 
pective), notoriety, good will of others, desirable em- 
ployment in such a cause, or allay of enmity — (the 
objects of charity, greatly a crowd of suff raged feared 
or other persistent unthrifts of sort (55 f &) , and ex- 
aggerated sufferings sensationally exaggerated of 
drouth flood famine war etc) : With most people of 
the time-, to not believe and act with any of the many 
herds of belief and doing, is adjudged an anomaly if 
not a crime or other offense against orthodoxy relig- 



ious political or other of our time : Of the rare in hu- 
man experience-, it is usually very difficult when such 
takes place to get the credence of those in critical au- 
thority sufficient to an investigation — (all as very nat- 
urally denied in mind by the premise of experience in 
whole being against such rarity, and the absence of 
thought to the fact that the rare (see indifferency up 
to accident) does nevertheless come about at rare times 
of occurrence — a premis as valid as that of any other 
variable experience (7 * * b), and a fact may be to 
be exemplified in this book) : To scientific minds of 
thought in these days of promising error and pre- 
tention-, claim to any unusual discovery of kind, is 
usually dismissed without belief, or received with cau- 
tion — (the premis, the abortion of many such claims 
in experience, — or rarity of their truthfulness — kin- 
dred to this see errors and surprise of occasional ex- 
perience) : Of the present state of the reasoning pow- 
ers of most men anywise interested-, a lie well stuck 
to, and that is not plainly unreasonable to the circum- 
stances screening it, is just as likely to have some to 
many or more adherents of its truthfulness, as the 
truthful side of dispute its opposition — (hence friends 
to both sides of most questions of conflicting testi- 
mony partially or wholly false of either) : With most 
people of the present state of popular intelligence-, 
authoritative knowledge is muchly an infliction of 
which is really a prolix jumble of superfluous hazy 
and rambling expression, useless and cumbrous dis- 
tinction, swell word fool think fool say food do and 
false notions of sort (|| b) greatly scrap of authorita- 
tive construction or collection — (of proposition-, often 
as subject matters of expression loaded down with 
latin greek high sounding or extraneous smatter fill 
of conceit and superciliousness distinctive to speech of 
plain people) @ : 



@ Hence inutility of most journalism oratory, school train- 
ing, etc ("wig-wags" of interest) other than pose and influence 
over ignorance and smatter to prestige soft place and good liv- 
ing for themselves or others: — all as by the fact that higher 
mathematics language literature and news, are greatly useless 
to knowledge other than mental recreation, or an emotional in- 

89 



fluence of others in politics theology trade etc, and quite useless 
other than a means to notoriety, and an inextricable confusion 
of facts and rights of sort picked out and suppresed to willful 
and let alone keep of society divided into parties and sects of 
hate and proscription. [65]. 

Most praises of ancient medevial and modern art, 
as well as many infectious notions of dress behavior 
and speech, are but so many questionable harmless 
becoming or foolish particulars of the any number of 
acute or chronic fads prevailing of the any time and 
place £ : 

£ Of all childish things-, the most childish, is that of an 
imitative display consciously parrot a some bell wether or sec- 
ond of sort, and contemptuously distinctive of others and sense- 
less of conduct: — for example of such distinctive foolishness-, 
see display of college and high school smatter in artifiical ac- 
cent or use of words; infective praises of statuary and painting, 
run mad of nudity, and over estimated are of rennaissance and 
older painters flatter of religious subjects then in paramount 
estimate of theological zeal — (see theological push of men to 
notoriety here more than genius) ; fadish distinctions of the 
rich in fact and the renting and would be aristocracy to plain 
life; swell display bunkum of come take a drink or a smoke 
assume of plethoric income and business importance or wealth; 
relished or enforced fads display of unusual salutation enter- 
tainment eat marriage or funeral. [For other foolish fads 
versus plain life-, see initiative modes of letter address, un- 
natural reserve to strangers, card calling, lunch at noon, din- 
ner in the evening, etc etc distinctive of aristocratic display, 
and their silly contempt for others more natural in their man- 
ners of life. Boorishness an opposite of this,- in it a lingering 
semisavagry still clinging in the lower walks of society. An 
intermediate of this, a normal to the two,- by such possessing a 
greater rationality of conduct]. 

Of the many false or indemonstrable beliefs of 
the world, the tenacity of belief and proscription, is 
quite proportional to its oldness of stay, and embit- 
tered to milder opposition it has sustained — (see fun- 
damental and minor beliefs of partisanism Mahoma- 
tanism Catholicism (rabbies of hate) Arianism and 
Orthodoxy) : With most people of our day-, their as- 

90 



surance of belief or disbelief, is quite proportional to 
their own ignorance, and the deceit and prejudice of 
their leaders : In disputes of the strong and strong, or 
strong and weak (national to individual)-, the dispo- 
sition often of the strong and strong, is to arbitrate 
compromise or rest of their difficulties; and of the 
strong and weak-, the strong to encroach upon, ignore 
threaten or force the weaker — (of the strong and 
strong-, instance England and the United States in 
the late seal fishery and Venezuela dispute; England 
Germany Austria Italy France and Russia in the East- 
ern question : of the strong and weak-, instance Eng- 
land and France versus the Kedive late in the Egyp- 
tian question; the U. S. v's Mexico (1845) and Spain 
in Cuba £ @ ; and England again against India Da- 
homey South Africa Venezuela and all other nations 
forcibly tributary her unfeeling trade and usury) : 



£@ American motive in the Hispano-American war just 
begun (May 1898), is Spanish financial weakness, prospective 
trade, and Spanish inhumanity exaggerated by a gabbling Amer- 
ican press. [As a specimen of this infinite gabble now on tap-, 
our newspapers one day announce a great bombardment or 
landing of troops here or there, and deny it the next; a move- 
ment of troops immediate to Manila one day, and its postpone- 
ment the next; the Spanish fleet at Cadiz one day, and the West 
Indies the next; When our fleet fires a shot or so at shore bat- 
teries-, every American shell strikes center, and every Spanish 
shot in reply goes away wild — (15 n n) ; of Spanish killed and 
wounded-, the numbers run into hundreds, while the Americans-, 
none or a few hurt. In one terrific bombardment (newspaper) 
here the other day-, the Spaniards were quite annihilated, and 
the American casualties were (in large head lines) One Man's 
Finger Hurt; etc etc of whole pages of such babble, and it 
selling (all hours of the day and night) like wild fire in 
drouthy weather. Since the above and now the bombardment of 
Santiago is on-, the escape of eight to thirteen inch shells 
through an average reporter's brain (never above the crowd), 
is truly astounding: — of broadsides or turret fire-, hill sides 
open, and Spanish guns works and gods disappear into a one 
grand explosive phenomena of annihilation. Later: now that 
Santiago has fallen, a reporter looking over the grounds of 
bombardment, seems mystified that he can find but little trace 

91 



of the bombardment. Aside the reporter however-, the war in 
Cuba has been a very careful humane one, with the credit 
resting so equally on all that a hero in this instance has failed 
to come to top and take all the credit. [Of later developments 
(1901) politics now seem to have had a hand in this. & Great 
heroism, comes of composed courage skill and success against 
extreme and momentous danger — hero worship in the multitude, 
often wholly or greatly a matter of panegyric in tiptoe atten- 
tion and dashing circumstance more dazzling than perilous or 
momentous] . 

In war-, the motive of the instigators, are con- 
ceptive aggrandizement sympathy for others, preser- 
vation, or revenge; the greater commanders, concep- 
tive honor and renown; the lesser officers, official no- 
tice and promotion; and the soldier in general, curi- 
osity to see, infective enthusiasm of the cause, pres- 
tige of collective bravery, reward of pay, glory of 
victory, and praise of panegyric — (motive in all acts 
of defeat is fear of death captivity or disgrace) : In 
peace-, the motives of men, are aggrandizement of 
wealth (pursuit and possession), preservation of 
wealth (keep or protection), enjoyment of wealth 
(economic or ineconomic assimilation), esteem of oth- 
ers (notoriety or respect), good of others (love or 
friendship), harm of others (enmity), or sense of 
right the best method of behavior— (see motives of- 
ficial priestly professional and other to every mode 
of acquiring the good things of wealth, conserving 
them and their modes (|| Ay # #)» gaining the es- 
teem of others, and assimilations of the same to en- 
joyment — no motive, no conduct) ; and in motive al- 
leged or emphasized solely for the good of others, set 
it down usually a lie covering up some individual class 
partisan national * @ or sectarian gain or prestige 
@ @ — see bankers craft of usury wily cushioned in 
campaign literature of a gold basis only beneficial to 
labor and business of the common people — all legisla- 
tion civil, is business advantage per statute. 



*@ "Few in public affairs act from a mere view of the 
good of their country whatever they may pretend; and though 
their actings bring real good to their country yet men primarily 
considered that their own and countries interest was united, and 
did not act from a principle of benevolence." [Franklin]. 

92 



@@ See play of this racket by organized charity (egotis- 
tic) to paid avocation within, and false prestige of juggled 
benevolency incant of substitutedly unmentioned donors thus 
sequestered into the succor of an ingenious trade in charity — 
(objects of the same, greatly a class of dead-beat prodigals and 
unthrifts of sort unworthy ungrateful and often unneedy the 
objects of gift a remainder, or attention at all: see also 
noisy gift displayed (other's money much) to dissembled gain, 
political or other prestige, or allay of official or sectarian en- 
mity. [Of unorganized charity acute to profit or prestige, see 
self appointed and other agencies casual of mostly exaggerated 
famine flood storm etc indiscriminate an any responsibility need 
or no as the case may be, and ending up usually in a one quite 
inexposed mixture of fraud honesty favoritism need and im- 
position. Of investigation here, se "overflowed bacon'' in a 
Mississippi inundation a few years since, and other to San 
Francisco's three million squander and filch of crazy give. 
"Therefore when thou doest thine alms-, do not sound a trum- 
pet before thee as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in 
the strets that they may have glory of men" x x x; "But when 
thou doest thy alms, let not the left hand know what thy right 
hand doeth". [St Matthew]. 



In all alleged facts of history conversation and 
contemporary publications (text and advertisement) 
not authenticated by unadulterated perception or nec- 
essary invariable or ascertained conjunction with 
other known thing or things of the time-, the truly 
wise man (few indeed) withholds judgment other 
than a positive or negative indetermination : To argue 
against interested or cherished notions of sort (busi- 
ness political religious or other) in the ignorant or 
prejudiced many, is a useless waste of time and en- 
ergy: z z z On subjects outside of personal whim, or 
avocational or casual experience-, the greater body of 
mankind credulously or meekly submit their judg- 
ments, and wellfare, to assertions and advice or dic- 
tation of a some deferred authority (parasitic "confi- 
dence" men) with little or no thought of an investi- 
gation or other question why of their opinions recom- 
mends or dictations — (hence avidity of interested or 
conceited authority to (opportune of time) display 
their opinions praises recommends and denunciations 
of thing indefinitely shorn stint or miss a reason why 



— (11 A * *J), and see much political and other con- 
fidence games of opinion panegyric €J * recommend 
and condemnations of sort in address review or mis- 
sive; hence to the same dignitary display of much in- 
terested authority in important reserve, official in- 
signia, impressive ceremony, alter thorne or dais,- a 
dazing ado to impress of great personage and mystic 
knowledge on organized ignorance succor of it a cheat 
in sheeps clothing — (8 w w 2, 11 2 fl) hence to another 
device-, a greatly deceptive familiarity or condecention 
$ @ flatter of contituency. 



•I* Interested or infatuated praise of men faction avoca- 
tion or occurrence (individual or class) shorn stint or amiss of 
facts to real importance or beneficence same, has had more to do 
with the reputation of many men factions etc than merit or 
no in themselves — see in this panegyric greatly preserved or 
attended to, and the facts greatly lost exaggerated or never 
there. [Hence of the Greeks-, characters of many, are greatly 
preserved in the praises of infatuated authors with the facts 
mostly lost or greatly exaggerated: their benefits to mankind as 
others with the facts coming to us are their opening up to 
knowledge the truer avenues of tangled phenomena in nature 
and mind — hence idealism, a curse to intelligence, and reality a 
benefit; Greek art, (ornament or dexterity), an ecstacy of ad- 
miration, and a mad shunt of genius from industrial develop- 
ment. For men living mostly on panegyric alone-, see charac- 
ters made great out of exciting events or factional stir dis- 
turbent only or mediocre of value by a great noise of word and 
tiptoe attention of populace,- still infective of panegyric decent. 
Of greatness by fact-, Alexander was gerat in military genius, 
and beneficent in his military successes destructive of Persian 
tyranny and prodigality, and his rescue of the west from her 
eastern danger and the solid establishment of trade art and 
knowledge between southern Asia Egypt Europe and Asia 
Minor. Napoleon Bonaparte was even a great genius than Alex- 
ander, and beneficent to the extent of breaking up old fanatic 
Europe to a better development of mind and means constructed 
over his volcanic disturbance; etc of other greatly great and 
more or less beneficent men — (a true test of men in glory of 
word, is genius and beneficence) : see further praise of avoca- 
tion a veneer of laboristic aggression or professional cheat; also 
power of showy laudation or fuss to impress of undue importance 
feather of some concealed interest of sort, or swell of insignifi- 

94 



cant conceit — see in this the great game of politics here still on 
(1904), and all swell splashes of our mushroom renting and 
other would be aristocracy. Display of dress manners junket 
etc without an eye to interest, a great imbecility of mind and 
do — often widened out now in paid or flattering echoes of 
societary or other blarney mouth journalism eye to some interest. 



$@ See in exceptions here sincerest condescension of 
Prince Gautama and its tremendous influence to this day in 
followers now four hundred and twenty-five millions. Prince 
Gautama. "Milk in the shepherd's lota? Ah my lord I cannot 
give it thee quoth the lad, thou seest I am Sudra and my touch 
defiles: Then the world honored spake: — Pity and need make 
all flesh kin; there is no caste in blood which runeth of one 
hue, nor caste in tears which trickle salt" alike; "neither cames 
man to birth with tilka mark stamped on his brow, nor sacred 
thread on neck x x x: give me to drink my brother". [A man 
of purest motives to good of others (greatly undeserving), and 
an intensest melancholy forlorn of hope in life, and brood of 
sufferings and wrongs to the weak — to him all a heart aching 
fate of life, and relieving quench in Nirawana. See The Light 
of Asia by Arnold] . 



Of all tyrannies-, the greatest tyranny, is the 
tyranny of willful o** unwillful deceit systematically- 
played upon organized prejudice and ignorance to 
gain, place, or notoriety — (see Tammany of New York 
and their copies on a smaller scale of other cities here, 
and much state politics for examples of a solid ma- 
jority tyranny over men for money place and noto- 
riety; also an Italian priesthood over a Roman Catho- 
lic laity) : Of all depraved intelligence-, the most de- 
praved, is that of an abject reliance of the masses upon 
an authority seeking gain and notoriety at the expense 
of a systematically unenlightened and deceived many, 
and helpless few — (see suppression of information in 
tricks of trade usury speculation politics etc to knowl- 
edge in our newspapers schools and other literature 
for examples when casually a word of mouth comes 
from behind the screens, or a cloven foot appears) : 
In seeking- the ooinion of others about subjects of pro- 
fessional or useful knowledge-, receive only those that 

95 



can be brought to a test of necessity or an invariable 
or ascertained experience (10 m x) ; and vice versa, 
eschew all opinions not c .ognizable to the same, and 
suspend all judgment about things undeterminate or 
uncertain of an unverified experience : In seeking ad- 
vice of others to guide in life-, take advice only of men 
about things in which they have by a corrected ex- 
perience made a success to themselves or others; and 
vice versa, avoid or be wary of the advice of others 
about things in which they have failed in life without 
seeing their own errors: Authoritative opinions and 
advice uttered opportune an any influence of others 
(suffragan patron or homage), and connected directly 
or indirectly with occupation place party church school 
or other this and that, should be received with a cau- 
tion, and the motives (3 &) inquired into — (for ex- 
amples-, see professional official and lay opinions op- 
portune gold standard, corporative, partisan, medical, 
religious, or other promptu interests or notions of sort 
incident to gain, retainer or aspirant of place, flatter 
of church or constituency, sentiment of subsidy or en- 
dowment, and scheme of legislation election or appoint- 
ment: — therefore individual or class influence of men 
to an any use of person or property nonessential or 
inequitable to functions of life, is a moral wrong) : 
Persons instanter or otherwise ready of imperative 
opinion advice or dictation, are usually persons uncon- 
sciously indiscriminate of a conceited knowledge with- 
in different from that of a verified knowledge with- 
out : — for examples-, take note of all unreasoning stiff 
headed or all wise persons about * , and watch for 
the same within if not in humility. [In above axiom 
(16 a) and minor generals examples-, any instance 
is an individual, all individuals assumed alike, a spe- 
cies, and all the species collected in the generalization, 
species variably resembling (16 CJ. Demonstration 
here, human doing and motive correctly observed and 
inferential — Prelim' &] . 



* See here our ever amendatory all wise and never-self- 
suspecting critics that have never said or did an original thing 
in their lives volubly discovering to the world just what a this 
or that genius of sort should have done been or said to an en- 



96 



hancement of his aids to industry or enjoyment — spirit of 
genius here, a new fit find or restore of hidden or smothered 
naturalness free of a conceited this or that homesteaded in a 
rut. [Of contrast of naturalness and artificiality in our drama 
and society-, see natural and unnatural pose of countenance 

For other characteristics under any collection of 
particulars assumed alike or same in species kind-, the 
following will illustrate the any or all of them: — as 
general activities of thing walking, running, sowing, 
plowing, keeping store, going to town, attending 
church, going to school, keeping books, lecturing, writ- 
ing, going, coming, ascending, descending, eating, 
hating, loving, smiling, shining, clouding, thundering, 
raining, snowing, freezing, thawing, gathering to- 
gether, dispersing, going to war, nursing the sick, etc, 
etc of all sorts of doing individually alike or same in 
species, and resembling in any collection of species 
named. 

Of generalizations of sameness-, exampled in A 
division (army), defined a body of soldiers composed 
of two or more brigades; and A brigade, defined (same 
in) a body of soldiers composed of two or more regi- 
ments ; and A regiment defined a body of soldiers com- 
posed of ten or more companies; and a company de- 
fined (same in) a body of soldiers composed of one 
hundred or less men : — here by a process of indiscrim- 
inate comparison, "A division,'* "A brigade" etc, are 
analytically seen in their brigades regiments etc (com- 
posed of two or more brigades regiments etc) as one 
and the same things. 

Of mathematical sameness general of definition-, 
exampled in three defined one and one and one,- or one 
and two — (etc of any number with its factors sepa- 
rated into any relatively grouped or singular, or 
grouped and singular divisions of combination) ; The 
angles of an equilateral triangle, are same as the 
acutes of their any produced right angled triangles 
within. 

Of analytic definition purporting sequence of fac- 
tor-, exampled in walking defined (same in) an any 
succession of coupled like movements and poises of 
locomotion on two or more legs; and rotary motion 
(stationary or locomotive), same in an any succession 
of circular movements about an axes. 

97 



Of general sameness in constructive or other 
definition-, exampled in all born and hatched indi- 
viduals of life, defined animals ; man defined an animal 
that cooks his food and possesses greater foolishness 
than other animals; and in whiteness defined (same 
in) a kind of color white; and ivhite defined any part 
of whiteness the applied particular severs out of ex- 
pression; etc, etc. 

Of specific sameness or likeness in quantity con- 
trasted-, exampled in two and two, are four, or four 
is two and two — (sameness by constructive or analytic 
definition — 14) : and tvjo and three, equal (like) to 
five (other), or five equal (like in quantity) to two 
and three, other — as likeness by comparative juxta- 
position of two and three with five other, or five with 
two and three other,- and not a coalesion. 

Of sameness or likeness in mathematical symbol-, 
exampled in 6—4+3, are 5, a same; or 6—4+3=5, other: 
x— y+z2m; or x— y+z=m : 6x4-^-2212; or 6X4-^2=12, 
other; (2:4=2) :: (5:10-2); (4:2=2) :: (10:5=2): 
Increase of an any two quantities as many times as 
their units of measure, are same in the first quantity 
as many times as its units, and the second as many 
times as its units of measure, and twice the first as 
many times as units of the second. [For demonstra- 
tion of this theorem per sameness (a particular), veri- 
fy it by a lot of buttons or grains of corn aggregated 
first of subject, and then divided per definition. This 
theorem in its old form as much higher mathematics 
in kind, is naught but mathematical puzzles of sort to 
an amuse of mathematical propensity, or a show off 
of high fly learning to prestige. In all these examples-, 
the particular is found by application of the numbers 
to particular things. For general likeness in speech 
or writing, see simile and metaphor in Rhetoric for 
express or implied likeness of meanings in expression 
same or double in composition, and implied likeness 
connected or not with similarity (16 c n) in articulate 
endings and beginnings conjunctive of easy or har- 
monious syllables and words of speech — (see positions 
of tongue and mouth conjunctively easy in this) ; & 
and note implied likeness of expression to fact (Pre- 
lim &), or other expression definitive or descriptive. 



Colligation, is to be distinguished from generalization 
in that colligation is but putting together all definite 
or indefinite parts of a whole (too large for simple 
comparison) as an individual: — the sailing around an 
island to determine what it is, or the observing of 
the different positions of a planet in revolution to 
determine its orbit, is but colligation of the parts to its 
one whole revolution ; and the recognition of any num- 
ber of individuals as belonging to a collection of kind 
or amount, is but a result of prior classification that 
may or may not become a premis of inference as the 
classifications exhaust or not all the individuals to a 
collection] . 

166 Of likeness in difference-, things and at- 
tributes of thing discriminately incoincident of com- 
parison, are likely different each other as differences 
existing in the terms compared. 

x Individuals in their factors of thing (structure 
or doing), form quality quantity place or time dif- 
ferent, are unlike each other as differences of dis- 
tance direction dimension weight density energy ve- 
locity inertia number place or time apart or whatever 
way combined in the factors of term to term discrim- 
inated. [All phenomena here, a movement or equi- 
librium of sort factorally differing]. 

M Of like differences general-, unlike things 
joined disjoined substituted or varied in a same thing 
(or term) or like things (or terms), produces dif- 
ferences as that joined disjoined substituted or varied : 
unequal amounts added or taken from a same or like 
amount, produces inequality as amounts added or 
subtracted : The individuals of the any different spe- 
cies collected, are unlike as their values of incoinci- 
dence above their values of coincidence: singular or 
mutual unlike taking from any two or more things (or 
two or more terms of number) , and differential distri- 
bution to the same things (or terms), produces differ- 
ence between them as sum or sums of difference in dif- 
ferentiation $. [For other values of unlikeness, see dis- 
criminations of abraded transposed aglutinated segre- 
gated or substituted syllables words phrases or sen- 
tences differ of changed forms and meaning in Ian- 

L0FC ' ~ 99 



guage: also all other evolutions of difference in 
geology animal life vegetation knowledge and civiliza- 
tion. For other examples in difference-, see contrast 
in rhetoric for rhetorical effects of difference in the 
Ludicrous Humor and Wit; and dissimilarities of 
phonic endings and beginnings of syllables and words 
in difficult or inharmonious forms of speech 
— (1 n *.) ; also unlikeness of expression to fact (13*), 
or other expression definitive or descriptive, and con- 
trast of action particular or character. & Any collection 
of differences same, constitute a species of difference: 
— as difference between 4,6 always 2; and the differ- 
ence between 1, 2, 3, 4, etc juxtaposed with 3, 5, 7, 9, 
etc always 2, 3, 4, 5, etc: also a group of specific dif- 
ferences in series always produce a species: — as dif- 
ferences between 1, 3, 5, etc with 3, 5, 7, etc specific 
in 2, 2, 2, etc equal of difference — 16c &. See further 
all specific differences a likeness of difference] 

16c Of likenesses in resemblance things or at- 
tributes of thing, coincident and incoincident of com- 
parison, are likely like and unlike as likeness to un- 
likeness existing in the terms discriminated. 

Individuals in their factors of thing or attribute 
alike and unlike, resemble each other as likeness to 
unlikeness of the any factors in distance direction 
(arrangement) dimension weight density energy 
velocity inertia number place or time apart or what- 
ever way combined in the factors of term to term 
compared [2, 3, 11 a n n. Ratios of likeness to un- 
likeness in thing or attribute, is as likeness of the re- 
lations between them to difference. All phenomena 
here, motions or equilibriums of sort resembling more 
to less in factor] 

M Of generalizations (likeness) minor of like- 
ness and unlikeness in whole-, exampled in the acute 
and obtuse angles of any changing parallelogram, dif- 
ferentiate in likeness and unlikeness of form as coin- 
cidences and incoincidences of their successively con- 
joined sides each divided by their sum ; all annual and 
diurnal recurrences of planetary movement, are sim- 
ilar in form, but dissimilar in magnitude: 2 and 3 or 
5, and x and y, are similar or dissimilar to each other 
as their likeness or difference — similarity, ever of 
likeness of any degree greater than unlikeness, and 

100 



dissimilarity, unlikeness of any degree greater than 
likeness [for phonic or expressive examples in like- 
ness and unlikeness, exampled in any implied similar- 
ities or dissimilarities of articulate endings and be- 
ginnings conjunctive of easy or difficult syllables and 
words of speech, music or discord — (1 n) ; and sim- 
ilarity or dissimilarity of expression to fact or other 
expression (definitive or descriptive), and resem- 
blances of action particular or character: — of expres- 
sion as variable truthfulness and untruthfulness of 
expression to fact or other expression compared — see 
Carpenter's Human Physiology See's 702-707: & All 
likenesses and unlikenesses of a same value, constitute 
a species of ratiol value: — as the ratio 4:12 in all 
instances, is ever 3: also a series of them, may pro- 
duce a species — as the ratios 1:2, 2:4, 3:5, etc = 2, 
2, 2, etc. See all specific resemblances a likeness of 
resemblances: also all discriminations of sort or 
amount resemblingly implied of any juxtaposed dis- 
tinctions. Of discrepancy to fact partial, see disin- 
terested investigation of interested ado partially true 
in plausible scheming: also over estimation of men to 
notarising events or push of factional interest — unmer- 
ited prestige to influence of others. In resemblance-, 
elimination of that incoincident, is difference; the re- 
mainder, likeness- — hence resemblance, is composed 
of likeness and difference] 



AFFECTIONS OF MIND CORRELATIVE AND 
CONSERVATIVE OF FORCE. 



Sec. 17 Sensible mass motion of direct or indi- 
rect cause through a rythmic medium of molecular 
vibration (nervous within and airly without, 3 X &) 
impinging upon nervous structure (conductive), and 
couduction and reflexion coincident to incoincident to 
sensation (limited), affects mind as change of matter 
through space and time variable of one to the other; 

101 



and mass motion suddenly arrested or frictionally re- 
tarded, differentially disappears to other affections of 
mind as consciousness of sound, heat or elec- 
tricity: again-, sound heat or electricity of 
natural or artificial means, differentially disappears to 
other appearances as solid or fluid motion mass of 
consciousness; also conductive or radiant heat and 
electricity of indice, disappear one into the other when 
one a higher and the other a lower state of potential, 
and of contact: and lastly-, mass motion transferred 
into unit phenomena or vice versa, and conductive 
phenomena into radiant phenomena or vice versa, are 
found of experiment differentially same of force. 
[Gain and loss of force equal to each other] 

Thus-, of an any objective impulse of unit matters 
and force external or internal of source, and contact of 
radiation or conduction with a nervous medium of 
mind-, things and attributes of thing (1) impress 
themselves upon mind in infinite forms (3 1§ *}) 
qualities quantities places and times immediately or 
mediately objective of consciousness**. [3#] 

** Excluding all belief of self or object as sub- 
jective or objective existence (or being)-, knowledge 
of self or object as subjective or objective existence, 
consists in immediate sense (or feeling) of self or 
object in any present experience, and mediate sense 
(or feeling) of self or object in memory of past exper- 
ience. [See Reid's Inquiry ch. 2, sec 3-6; Dugald 
Stewart on the Mind Vol. 1 ch. 1 sec 1-3, Vol. 2 ch. 
1 sec 2, 3 ; Lewes Biographical History of Philosophy, 
subjects Heraclitus, Plato, Berkely, Hume, Hegel, 
Hobs, Kant etc. Lewes ever anxious to disprove all 
grounds of certitude in philosophy by his History and 
accompanying criticism-, says (in his refutation of 
Descartes' Philosophy of Certitude, p 452) "Sensation 
is a consciousness of changes operated in ourselves,- 
and not a consciousness of objects causing these 
changes — (3 x, 11 A * z) : again on page 532 by this 
implied refutation-, he says of Locke's exposition of 
certitude-, "This leaves Idealism unanswered." Now 
Idealism from this standpoint, says we have no con- 
sciousness of object: — how! by inference (not con- 
sciousness) "of changes operated in ourselves from 

102 



physiological and other study; consciousness being of 
the object, and not of changes (nervous) operated in 
ourselves at all. Again: Lewes on page 621 defend- 
ing subjectivity of knowledge to defeat the possibility 
cf Philosophy, says of Eeid's distinction of images, 
"They do not remain the less purely subjective which 
ever way we regard them: — ''They are changes in me 
^ — because we cannot ransced consciousness-, we can 
never know things per se ^^~l 

In disproof of Descartes Cogito Ergo Sum-, it has 
been objected from many quarters (Lewes p 440) that 
"I am," is a begging of the question,-since existence 
has to be proved identical with thought: — now direct 
perception being an immediate consciousness of self 
or other thing present, and thought (11 C x) the re- 
membrance or conception of self or other thing not 
present, it is self evident that "I am" or other thing 
directly objective, is known immediately by conscious- 
ness (direct perception) of the I or other thing, and 
that I or other thing outside of immediate sense, is 
comprehended by remembrance or conception only — 
therefore "I am" is not identical with "I think" in 
that "I am" is of the directly perceived thing present; 
and "I think" of the remembered thing past, or con- 
ceived thing past present or future. [Descartes error 

^ Not by "consciousness": — <J CJ Therefore we cannot know 
per se They are changes in us [The author here has no de- 
murrer to make against that insensibly substratum to sensibility 
being a Fundamental Belief in itself (58), but does not assume 
a consciousness sensationally objective (the beginning of all 
knowledge) a matter of fundamental belief at all — consciousness 
primary and secondary the all of knowledge perceptive and in- 
ferential — 11 c n. Assuming "sensation of object" a primary 
belief-, the sensation of the belief in mind (8 **) must also be 
a primary belief — hence belief by belief, is same as "conscious- 
ness") : — the truth of the matter is that perceived objects are 
true so for as they go (11 a), and the conceived objects true so 
far as necessarily transcendental the perceived objects the basis 
of all to knowledge — perception true and necessary conception 

(11 n n) inferential, the all of existence and no existence— 

59 B @]. 

103 



here, is the mistaking remembrance or conception 
apart or combined of think a premis to direct per- 
ception. Direct perception then (10) is an original 
proof or disproof of things resting on consciousness 
the foundation of all knowledge — (hence Diogenes re- 
futation of Plato stands good) ; and inference, a sec- 
ondary proof or disproof resting on the conscious feel- 
ing of necessity or experience — 11 c] 

18. Structures and Causings to cause and ef- 
fect, are the any masses molecules or atoms of sort 
causingly -and passively conjoined to any simple or con- 
cert change pause or fixity of something to place sev- 
erance or combination within or without themselves. 

19. Cause is forcible activity of an any number of 
structures in sort causingly coincident and incoinsident 
an any axis of movement or equilibrium and greater 
and less of force in structures motor and resistant to 
change, and equal of force in structures tendent motor 
and resistant to equilibrium. 

All as attractions acting immediately across space 
as primary cause, or as primary cause acting through 
an any intermediate adhesions and cohesions of stress 
strain (Fig. 3) or impact as secondary cause. [Motor 
and motor tendent causes ever being accompanied by 
resisting causes-, it follows that coordinates (18) of 
cause can never be less than two — see gravity ever an 
assistant or resistant to other causes, and air and the 
earth's surface (ground or water) ever a resistant to 
resultant gravity or other contact of effect in cause. 
[Tendent motor here, are the any forces ready to pro- 
duce change upon removal of sufficient resistances 
antiposed.] 

20. Effect is an any movement (change of sort) 
or equilibrium (pause or fixity of sort) singular or 
concert an any number of motor tendent-moior or 
resisting causes producing it or them apart or what- 
ever way combined. 

M. Equilibriums singular or concert, are dis- 
tinguished as an any singular or concert pause or fixity 
of an any thing or things to place separation or 
combination in gravity magnetism construction isom- 
erism (25) equilibrium (23) dissolution or recombin- 

104 



a don — movements singly or concertly translatory 
when a change of place simply, and return when turn 
and return of something to a same place is reckoned — 
an exhaustion of all change simple or concert [Of con- 
cert here,- 1 m x), see house machinery man tree fac- 
toral collections grain flour seed cloth ornament tool 
book map town street faction or other association 
passively concert an any causation to their any suc- 
ceeding turn of causing in sort : also food and fuel an 
effect of prior causes to consequent causes incident of 
their potentials consumed to other succeeding effects, 
and landscape or page in sensation per concert of 
natural objects or words composing them to sensa- 
tion; also manuscript here, effects of previous causes 
concertly divisional (1 m & &), and their consequent 
causes factoral to other thought of incidence — 61 m. 
See further all complicated or simple results to prior 
or consequent causation in their factors to develop 
make mend grow take receive transfer or preserve — 
results of cause concert, ever made up of factoral 
movements equilibriums or both start to finish — notice 
movements and pauses to doing casual or systemat- 
ically repetitive a something factoral to a result whole 
or larger factor. Massive equilibrium, of gravity and 
earthly resistance direct or indirect — (Two concerts) ; 
elementary equilibrium, of equipoises to vibrations 
atomically radiative or conductive in consecutively 
concert impact @ @, Of causes and effects concertly 
circumscribe an any event or nexus of events-, see in- 
cipient developing conserving and terminating touch 
of all incident causes and effects part or whole an any 
individual or collection of individual contingencies phy- 
sical organic or both: — for example, note an any all 
causes and effects incident a nation state party sect 
fraternity individual or local do good bad or both an 
any incipience of organization and sequent do; also 
circumstances converging from without, and forming 
the life of Oliver Twist,- incipient to end of his bio- 
graphy in Dickens. 

105 



@ @ For a unit of velocity=l, let the motor 
forces —2, and the resisting forces =1,- as a basic 
ratio of motor to resisting forces equal in 
value to two, and velocity equal to 1: and now-, let 
motor forces be increeased to 6 and resistance to 2 : — 
then motor forces to resistances will be one and one- 
half, and velocity ditto — (so of all other terms whose 
ratios are same in ratio) : etc. etc. of all change of 
terms in all ratios of differing values ad infinitum: 
again-, let motor forces vary in any ratio with resist- 
ance to a ratio tendent of equality as 1:1 or other 
equal terms, and we have equlibrium,- or no velocity: 
and again of singular movement to and including its 
following singular equilibrium (instantaneous to any 
immense durations of time) as a one of an any all con- 
secutively connected causes and effects-, let vx : vx, 
equal intensity (or ratios) f of motor and tendent 
forces to vy : vy their resisting forces; vm : vm their 
respective durations, and producing variation of in- 
tensity of motion (velocity) and equilibrium equal to 
va : va — then any inensity and duration between 
motor and equilibriate forces and their resisting 
forces, and their any movements and equilibriums, 
and respective durations, ratio of their any states of 
variation as values of their symbols slight to great in,- 
(vx :vy, vni) : (vx :vy, vm) :: (va, vm) : (va, vm) 
[vx and vy unequal of movement and equal of equilib- 
rium; so of vx and vx — movement and equilibrium 
run together in the same characters, and connective 
when inequality and equality take place]. 

Masses molecules atoms and particles of atoms as 
coordinates of cause, acting upon other matters of 
adhesion cohesion or magnetism are related of prod- 
uct as radiating, conducting, equilibriating integrating 
disintegrating transferring pausing or fixing of var- 
iable way their any simple or concert matters and 



t Intensity of motion is as the ratio of vx : vy,, and not 
the intensity of the forces; while intensity of equilibrium, is 
exactly proportional of the one to the other [Of smaller and 
larger bodies falling-, one will fall as fast as the other plus or 
minus difference of gravity to resistance. Inertia of matter 
against motion a resistant, transmutable into momentum equal, 
and vice versa] 

106 



force to a some succeeding cause immediate or med- 
iate of sequence : — all that of any rythmic conservative 
transferative or transformative causes to effects of 
sort variably continuous periodic or occasional as* 
times of force to the any respective kinds of move- 
ment and equilibrium simply or concertly succeeding 
as cause and effect ad infinitum. [See all names 
simple or concert of activities cause] 

d. Attraction of direct cause (18), produces pri- 
mary movement or equilibrium co-incident in time with 
primary cause; and force of indirect cause, produces 
indirect movement or equilibrium sequent in time to 
primary cause (19), and concomitant in time with 
immediate secondary cause* : — all as indirect cause 
with or without other direct cause opposite, opening 
other matter to their immediate centers of attraction, 
or of direct cause with or without indirect cause 
closing matter to other or reacting centers of attrac- 
tion f though equilibriums and equilibriums % ad in- 
finitum. 

E. For examples of thing structure causing and 
effect concert-, see all structures and causings joint an 
attraction solar and currents spacial (29) to annual 
and diurnal movements planetary; structures causings 
and results concert an earthy attraction of crust in- 



* See to this Hume's exposition of cause a finishing shunt 
of the primitive notions of it a volition projected into the phys- 
ical. [3 t &] 

f Any matter of opportunity to fall, falls in centers of at- 
traction as direct cause to impact and indirect cause that moves 
matter out to centers of molecular or atomic attraction: flexor 
muscle of function, closes immediate muscular matters to centers 
of muscular attraction, and indirectly opens extensor muscle to 
conditions of reverse function of all paired direct and indirect 
causes and products muscular. [See Carpenter's Human Physi- 
ology Sec. 654-658 : — of vessiclular muscle-, the contraction mag- 
netically motor, is of a thickening and shortening cellular re- 
version passive an expansive force oppositional: so of the rods 
in attached muscle and tension]. 

% See Correlation and Conservation of Forces in experi- 
ments of Rumford Joule and others, and as formulated into 
doctrine by Mayor Grove Helmsholt Faraday Carpenter and 
others. 

107 



ward, and an earthly radiation of heat outward con- 
comitant a contractive pressure of the earth's crust 
onto a gaseous core beneath, and counteracting reac- 
tions same to volcanic eruption, rupture of the earth's 
surface, or gradual elevation and depression of parts 
in gravity; structures causings and effects concert of 
the sun's heat at the earth's surface @ collective, and 
air above transferative to evaporation cloud transfer 
rain and calm; structures causings and results con- 
cert of earthy gravity motor and ground directive to 
flow percolation tear and deposit of silt water and 
air to lower places of gravity or pressure, stillness, 
and counter causings of sun and heat to their eleva- 
tions again in gravity,- cycle of fluid fall flow tear and 
rise ad finem; structures causings and results simple 
or concert of cell organ or individual to all animate 
and vegetate life in sort, and all contrivances to make 
mend grow alter evolve (25) preserve transport and 
distribute. [Figures 1-8. Earthy magnetism, a glob- 
ular shell with its greatest potency exterior its solid 
strata unipolar ily decreasing outward and inward.] 

@ See of this phenomena light of the san (radiant elec- 
tricity) correlatively transmuted into heat (25) by contact with 
the earth its cause of transmutation; hence radiation of light 
through an untransmuting space is without the phenomena of 
heat; and hence a something in space to an arrest of it neces- 
sary to the phenomena of heat. This something, a planet moon 
comet, meteorite or dust of solar space. [See also in Ency' 
Brit-' Geology Air and Water a result of this.] 



108 



FIGURE 1. 




DIRECT CAUSE AND MOVEMENT. 



mc, mc' resultant motor causes co-ordinate of at- 
traction (across space), and r c, r c resultant re- 
sistant causes co-ordinate of opposing attraction; s, 
5' s, s resultant secants (axes) of motor and resisting 
cause, and t, t', t, t', si, si', si, si' resultant tangents 
and sines of motor and resisting cause; p first point 
)f resulting motion estimated, 1 m line of movement, 
Hid m matter of movement at last point of resultant 
notion estimated. [By error of the artist to intention 
)f the author here-, the letters of the figures here and 
>elow are copied from the manuscript: so italics here 
ind the other plates correspond to scored letters in 
he plates] 

For illustrations of variable ratio of force in 
tny co-ordinate of motion in sort-, let mc and mc' be 
>f force in the ratio of one to two (instead of equal 
n the plate), and their resistances equal in re, vc; 
hen draw a line of motion through an m from p at 
>oint one third the distance between mc and mc' inter- 
ned^.ate; etc. of any ratio of force in any number 
md direction of coordinates attached. 

109 



FIGURE 2. 



+ i 



/(■ 


- ,/ 


*>^ 


* 
t 


\ . 


^t* ^-^ > 


"~^ ^ 










~**^A ' 


t w 


^^-^ -r*i| 


**■ ^ 


^**^ toV 




^=^^J 


"•^ 



T-^tV 



7/> i 



^c 



PLANETARY MOVEMENT AND CAUSE. 

mc, mc' resultant motor causes co-ordinate of at- 
traction and centrifugal force; re resultant resisting 
causes co-ordinate of a resisting medium (including 
inertia when acceleration arises) to movement; s, s' s 
resultant secants ,r, r', r resultant radii, and t, t' t\ si, 
si' si resultant tangents and sines; p first point of es- 
timated movement, 1 m line of movement, and in mat- 
ter in last point of estimated movement, & [for mo- 
ments of planetary motion and cause-, draw in im- 
agination very small lines like these to all momentary 
motions and impulses of force along the line of move- 
ment p to m. mc and re, are here extended to show 
sines that in reaelity are only an impulse long: — cen- 
trifugal impulse commencing behind p, and resistance 
extending as far in front of m as remotest elasticity 
pressure of momentum or molecules in front of m]. 

110 



FIGURE 3. 



*s% 




CAUSE AND EFFECT IN STRAIN. 



E earth; pc resultant power (cause) co-ordinate 
of strain; and re resultant resistance (cause) co-or- 
dinate of gravity; r, r radii s, s secants, t, t tangents, 
and si, si' sines; p point of beginning movement esti- 
mated, i m line of movement, and m matter of move- 
ment. [When pc is stronger than re-, movement occurs ; 
and when equal-, equilibrium occurs. Power effective 
to power ineffective (power lost) to resistance (grav- 
ity here) of stay (or same other to strain), is in- 
versely as the angle of all power to axes of actual or 
tendent movement to remainder of its quadrant — lost 
power here then (angle to actual or tendent move- 
ment) taken up in molecular resistance of stay (or 
same other in strain) connecting power with external 
resistance. [See function of muscle and tendon versus 
bone (stay) for effective and lost power to limb or 
bodily movement compound to flexor extensor or ro- 
tary movement apart or combined. Power double of 
knot or loup, and single or double of twist wrap or 
other strain to inter resistance. Power to resistance 
of the pulley-, all coincident of direction at point of 
connection, and equal plus friction — in other words, 
resistance plus friction equal power equilibrium to 
equilibrium] 

ill 



FIGURE 3b. 




CAUSE AND EFFECT IN STRESS. 



E earth; pc resultant power co-ordinate of stress 
(push) and re resultant resistance co-ordinate of grav- 
ity; r, r radii, s s, secauts, t, t, tangents, and si, si sines; 
p point of beginning movement, 1 m line of movement, 
and m matter of movement result, [pc, re touching any- 
where between m and the earth produces a like effect 
— p to m here by push, and potent inversely as angle to 
line of movement to remainder of quadrant. Stress 
always oppositional of the wedge or screw and hoop 
or tire. Power offective to ineffective of resistance to 
wedge screw or edge, all inversely as angle of push to 
axes of resistance ratio remainder of its quadrant. 
Power to pressure of confined fluids, proportional to 
degree of power by areas of resistance.] 

112 



FIGURE 4. 



*C V 



& 



f^* 



/i 



h* 



(MUSE AND EFFECT ON AN INCLINE PLANE. 

pc resultant power co-ordinate of gravity in 
wheel from p to m; re, re resultant resisting friction 
ml axle, and obstruction path of ground; r, r, r' radii, 
tv 9, s' secants, t, t, t', si, si, si' tangents and sines; 
i p incline plane, e earth, [re, re' here extended as per 
mc and re of Fig. 2 to show sines. Gravity here, po- 
tent inversely as angle of gravity to direction of ac- 
taal or tendent movement ratio the remainder of its 
tpadrant.] 

113 



LAWS. 



21a Masses or units of matter and force (masses 
molecules atoms and particles of atoms) attracting 
as co-ordinates of direct cause (18), attract propor- 
tional to electro-magneto intensity, quantity of matter 
and volume radial of distance into unity. [All as vol- 
ume globular conical or cylindrical and whole or sec- 
tional. Of Newton's Law, as inverse square of dis- 
tance quite the same — See the two poles of a magnet, 
but tivo imperfect globes of magnetism in contact and 
conflict.] 

M Electro-magneto intensity, is proportional to 
unit amounts of matter atom to atom effective to in- 
effective to impact by velocity (momentum), incoin- 
cidence to coincidence of direction in the units to 
planes of impact*, (sines to cosines), conjunctions of 
impact to time (velocity and hits to misses), and con- 
comitant diffusions by radiation conduction or trans- 
mutation apart or whatever way combined. [Decrease 
of attraction as volume (whole or section) radial of 
distance into unity, is by radial diffusion of vibration 
in molecules increasing in number and radial volume 
per this ratio, as concentric volumes of vibration equal 
of radii superpose, and intensity by volume. Electro- 
magneto force then has four factors : — amount of mat- 
ter in each unit of kind reciprocating and all or that 




* pe plane of impact, and d direction of motion: — Then 
si (sine,-or perpendicular) equal incoincidence and co (co sine.- 

114 



portion of its matter in line of impact by velocity 
(momentum), value of inclination to plane of impact, 
times of impact to time (24), and concomitant losses 
by losing radiation conduction or transmutation apart 
or whatever way combined — hits to misses in vibra- 
tion are by differing amplitudes velocities and direc- 
tions of vibrating atoms in differeing kinds and con- 
ditions of vibration vicinity of induction and contact,- 
as accords and discords of recurring increase or de- 
crease of impulse. See verge and radii of light in 
intensities of color varying oppositely as cone radii of 
spectrum into unity — sense of colors, a varying in- 
tensity of nervous vibration corresponding to that 
of colors retinal. Also see in this relation of force 
to radial volume velocity of planets inversely as radial 
area; area an any section of movements perihelion 
to aphelion plus or minus interference. In discrep- 
ancy of inverse square of distance to radial volume 
of distance (section or globe)-, see change of peri- 
helion in Mercury]. 

21B Masses or units of matter and force acting 
as co-ordinates of INDIRECT cause (18) , act as 'powers 
and resistances of stress strain or impact to direc- 
tions of force inverse the remainder of their quad- 
rants. 

Power and resistance effective and ineffective of 
leverage, are to each other inversely as radii of dis- 
tance to fulcrum and angles of direction in power or 
resistance to remainder of their quadrants: — power 



or base) equal coincidence of motion to plane of impact — inco- 
incidence inverse remainder of quadrant. [Let A stand for 
an any some electro-magneto intensity condition an any some 
magnetic field of sort, and by factor-, let m equal quantity of 
matter effective in the units to unit impact, v relative velocity, 
(a; : y) incoincidences to coincidences of motion to plane of 
impact, z rapidity of impacts, and a losses concomitant of radia- 
tion conduction or transmutation apart or whatever way com- 
bined: — Then m x v x (x -r- y) , x x z — a=A. When impacts 
are compounded of concomitant directions-, the value of the 
slower body must be deducted from the faster one to get the 
value of impact; and when the reverse-, the values of each 
must be made a sum to get the values of impact.] 

115 



or resistance then effective, is inversely as directio* 
of power or resistance to actual or tendent move- 
ments are of sine to tangent, to remainder of its 
quadrant. [Effectiveness here shading all the way 
from nothing (dead of perfect inco incidence to direc- 
tion of actual or tendent movement) to no waste of 
power in absolute coincidence with direction of actual 
or tendent movement — (see dead to greatest points of 
power in drive rod and crank of the steam engine, or 
connections of intermediate other gear) : — no effect- 
iveness here relative a result, all as relative waste of 
power balanced up in molecular resistance of the sub- 
stance (metal wood rope or other) connecting power 
and resistance to a result. Direction of power in these 
figures is as their angles of direction at p to segments 
£>f circle, line of movement. 

FIGURE 5. 




FIGURE 5b. 



JL 



SI 



St 



Co 



Co 



116 



LAWS OF THE LEVER. 

L lever, p effective power, f fulcrum, and r ef- 
fective resistance; co, co' cosines, t, t' tangents, si, si' 
sines of effective power and resistance are of free 
movement — L from f to p, radii of effective power, 
and f to r, radii of effective resistance. For the third 
and fourth figures of the lever, transpose p with r, and 
r or p with f. [The first second and third figures 
here, are same with that of the windlass wheel and 
pulley in all their simple or compounded forms of 
use : — in the rope and pulley or band and wheel-, when 
the power is external the run (resistance opposite)-, 
the first form applies alone; while of the windless or 
the wheel when the power is internal the rim (plane 
or coged)-, a half of the function when resistence is 
opposite the powder, is of the first form, and the other 
half of the second or third form — of the second when 
the crank is greater in radii than the drum or wheel, 
and of the third form when the crank is less in radii 
than the drum or wheel. Levers, oppositional of 
shear or pinchers. Power to resistance effective to 
wasted, is inversely as direction of power to remainder 
of its quadrant]. 

22 Masses or units of matter and force in trans- 
lation, turn and return, motion, transmutation, or 
equilibrium, and moving or equiposing, traverse or 
equipose points of space foot of all tangents or sines 
balance of motor or equilibriate cause, and all inverse 
sines or tangents balance of resistant cause. 

Form of motion or equilibrium is per base of suc- 
ceeding or terminate tangents (massive molecular or 
atomic) to forces co-ordinate of attraction stress 
strain or impact: intensity of motion or equilibrium, 
is as ratios of momentum motor or equilibriate to re- 
sistance ; duration of motion or equilibrium, is as times 
to other reacting causes point of equipose, or con- 
junctive of other causes immediate to remote, and 
simple or complex (m) of approaching incidence **. 
[Kind of motion or equilibrium then dependent upon 
specific arrangement of any set or sets of co-ordinates 
to tangents or sines of their movements touching mat- 
ter of motion or equilibrium in direction. See X of 
Fig's 1-5] 

117 



xa. Same or like causes acting on same or like 
things or conditions of thing to movement and equil- 
ibrium, produce same or like effects. [See classified 
laws and phenomena of mechanics; diagnosis of dis- 
eases, and habits sentiments or like feelings followed 
or aroused under a same or like phenomena — (See ap- 
plause of ilk) ; specific colors of light, specific heats, 
and specific phenomena of electricity and magnetism; 
planetary motion machinery locomotion etc of all like- 
ness.] 

b. Same or like causes acting on unlike things 
or conditions of thing to movement and equilibrium, 
produce unlike effects as degrees of unlikeness result- 
ant the motion and equilibrium. [See varied effects of 
varied matters in same or like gravitation, and varia- 
tions of taste sentiment thought or volition aroused 
under a same or like phenomena*; variations of color 
light heat electricity from same or like sources and 
different mediums ; all motors in kind to differing uses 
etc.] 

c. Unlike causes acting on like things or condi- 
tions of thing to motion and equilibrium, produce un- 
like effects as unlikeness resultant of the causes. 
[See variations of chemical equivalence on like ele- 
ments or changes of element in isomerism or combin- 



* Husband and wife riding along the sea shore. Wife: 
"What a beautiful beach for a summer resort." Husband: "A 
dandy fine place to dig clams!" [Ingersoll per memory. See 
approval and disapproval mingled of factional speech, and 
lottery of review revision translation umpire court or commis- 
sion free; also see that a differing estimate of things judged 
good bad better best worse worst fine superfine delightful hideous 
deserving undeserving worthy unworthy admirable undesirable 
becoming unbecoming despisable true untrue right wrong etc. 
of all other measures of estimate outside a general quantitive 
establishment or assent.] 

118 



ation, and conduction or radiation through a like me- 
dium by unlike sources; microbic life in varying cu~ 
eases of the blood, like tissues, or like organs of life; 
etc. etc.] 

d. Unlike causes acting on unlike things of move- 
ment and equilibrium, produce unlike or resembling 
effects as unlikeness or resemblance in causes and 
things of movement and equilibrium. [See variation 
of molecular compounds from unlike or resembling 
elements and chemical equivalence; diffusion of dif- 
ferent gases into each other under different conditions 
of diffusion, and radiation or conduction through dif- 
ferent mediums and different sources ; etc. etc.] 

e. Any kind or kinds of like or unlike or like 
and unlike elements (components) of thing in any con- 
ditions of co-existence and sequence to any recurring 
kind or kinds of things slowly varying in recombina- 
tion, and disintegrating through any reverse orders of 
cycle <m>cycle of return kind or kinds like similar or 
dissimilar in form magnitude density place and time 
as coincidence to incoincidence (x:y) of their consec- 
utively conjoined motion (16 A @ tendents resistants 
and matters of product to any precedent or typical 
order of kind or kinds involved, and nearness to re- 
moteness of their times: — as imperceptibly varying 
to a some relative condition of things coincident and 
incoincident to a some typical prior kind or kinds <$. 
[58 f q, 20c, 22e 16*. See Laws of Variation in Dar- 
win's Origin of Species, and Incipient Structures of 
Mivart's Genesis of Species : also variations earthy by 
general variations of temperature]. 

** For an illustration of a series of approaching 
complex conjunctions of concert causes and effects in- 
cidental to an awaiting cause and effect concertly con- 
junctive at end of the estimate-, take that of the de- 
livery of a letter now in the Post Office six miles dis- 
tant to the author now at home, and the following 
concatenation of concert causes and effects to bring 
about such a result: — by incident thought motive vo- 
lition and muscularity concert-, I now rise from my 
chair, walk to the door, open it, pass out and walk 
to the stable ; now by a group of concert causes move- 

119 



ments and equiposes of eyes body legs arms and fin- 
gers, I harness my horse, and lead him to the cart; 
again by a group of concert causes direct and indi- 
rect-, I hitch my horse to the cart, and place myself 
in a place to ride and drive; and now by a line of co- 
existent and sequent causes motions and equilibriums 
concert of eyes body legs arms and fingers co-ordinated 
with a cart, and another line of concerrt causes and 
motions in the body and legs of a horse and ground-, 
I drive to Independence and hitch my horse; and here 
again by a continued concatenation of other concert 
causes and effects-, I walk to the Post Office and call 
at the window for my mail ; and now a new set of co- 
ordinates called a postal clerk, are of a concerted 
attention motive volition and muscularity set a-going, 
and the box approached, and the letter taken out and 
delivered to the auhor : — all from start to finish a cer- 
tain concatenation (with others before) of concerted 
causes and effects incident of rising from my chair to 
delivery of letter; and again concert in turn with 
other causes and effects that to follow in connection. 
See all concatenations of functions within and do with- 
out. 

<m Of cycle direct-, exampled in any reactions 
of thing in any same individual part or whole, as here 
and there, and here again; up and down, to and fro, 
cycle of thing in turn and return to a same place: — 
as I went to town yesterday, and came back to-day; 
he came from the city Friday and returned to-day; 
this swings by center of gravity to and fro: of cycle 
indirect-, exampled of any transmutations of the ele- 
mentary conditions in any part parts whole or wholes, 
and other different arrangement in other intermediate 
kind or kinds of thing dissolvent to another like thing 
same in kind: — all as any number of transmutations 
of elementary matter or force concatenate an any num- 
ber of intermediate kinds different of combination to a 
same arrangement of matter or force in a same kind 
of an individual — of force as transmutation of heat 
into electricity, and electricity again into heat; etc. of 
other conservation of forces only, and return of them 
like in kind. [See animal elimination or decay return- 
ing into vegetate life, to other animal food and elim- 
ination ad finem all evolving temperatures — 16a*. 

120 



GRAVITATION MAGNETISM ADHESION COHE- 
SION INTEGRATION DISINTEGRATION 
TRANSMUTATION AND 
ISOMERISM. 

23 Masses and units of matter and force within 
massive molecular or atomic attraction of part to part 
greater than dissolving or diffusing forces, and at 
points of equilibrium, or of a rising falling intensify- 
ing or iveakening turn or return movement, are mas- 
sive or molecular gravitation, or molecular or atomic 
adhesion or cohesion. [Of gravitative phenomena-, as 
masses or molecules of sort at equipose, or rising or 
falling of variable direction speed and distance in 
gravity; and of adhesive or cohesive phenomena-, as 
concert molecules and atoms equiposing or rising and 
falling of variable direction intensity and distance in 
molecular or atomic attraction. Of consecutive unit 
vibrations parallel of arrangement-, are as vibrations 
of matter and force of impact variably conductive in 
kind, and of the same radiative in form-, are as 
rhythms of matter and force of impact radiative in 
kind — all as that of any parallel or radiative vibra- 
tions and impacts of sort equilibrioMng to other 
change of potential immediate to remote in time of in- 
cidence, or already conducting or radiating of a higher 
and lower potential of contact to gift of vibratory en- 
ergy concomitant other differential loss of vibratory 
energy — 11 A n n, 7 M <£] 

Of vibratory increase and differential decrease of 
momentum in conduction or radiation-, exampled of all 
heats sounds and electric phenomena transferring 
from a higher to a lower concert of communicative 
movement: — as of a hotter or warmer thing and me- 
dium to a cooler or cold thing or medium; a source 
of sound (intenser vibrations) to places of no sound 
or lower sounds; things or mediums of intenser elec- 
tricities and concomitant magnetisms to things or me- 
diums of less intense electricities and concomitant 
magnetisms. 

Equilibriating vibrations of unit cycle in aggre- 
gate matters of sort, are concerts of unit vibrations 
insulated variably of environment to receipt or loss of 
momentum in conduction or radiation. [27] 

121 



Distending vibrations (tending disintegrations) 
of unit rhythm in concert matters of sort, are condi- 
tions of unit vibration when freed of some incident 
restriction, or any wise recipient of other momentums 
of conduction or radiation. Contracting vibrations of 
unit phenomena in concert matters of sort, are con- 
ditions of unit vibration when undergiing a restric- 
tion of sort by a whatever cause incident, or undergo- 
ing a loss of momentum by conduction radiation or 
transmutation to other medium of lower potentiality 
incident. * 

Intensifying amplitudes of unit vibration in 
simple or concert matters of sort, are conditions of 
unit vibrations when in receipt of some conductive 
or radiative momentum of sort concomitant a greater 
amplitude velocity or both of vibration. 

Weakening amplitudes of unit vibration in concert 
matters of sort, are conditions of unit vibration when 
in loss of momentum by waning conduction or radia- 
tion to a lower medium of potentiality. 

Times of radiation or conduction are as their 
least common concurrences of conjunction to non-con- 



* Hence sudden or milder depression of the atmosphere 
in altitude local of the escape of electricity (transmute of heat) 
to the earth in storm or shower, and concomitant contraction 
(condensation) of molecular vibration in air and cloud as heat 
transmited into electricity (25m) , and its escape thus to the 
earth: — depression of the atmosphere local forming often a 
tremendous valley or vortex (concave at surface,- up end down 
of small dust whirlwinds) of inrushing air (all carried along 
in general movement) and sudden cooling of the same many 
miles around. [See phenomena of storm tornado water-spout 
and direction of winds to low barometric pressure: — in much 
of this, there seems to be good ground of an escape of heat 
vibration through electricity to the earth from the air or cloud 
above by a some unknown way than lightning — maybe a greater 
to less inductive perpendicular polarization of the air molecules 
(naturally wabbling about of airly motion) and cause of con- 
densation of air vortex of whirl, or valley of storm, or low 
pressure.] 

122 



junction between particles of vibration within their 
respective times of vibration to time, and incoinci- 
dences to coincidences of directiontoplane of impact. 
[Hence a variation of times in the cooling of different 
substances in the air to receipt of their different rad- 
iations — a cup of tea, will cool faster than a cup of 
coffee] 

x To illustrate the any values of least common 
conjunction to non-conjunction between unlike par- 
ticles of atomic vibration, and of any angles of direc- 
tion in opposition or concomitancy to plane of impact, 
conceive two particles of many vibrating outward 
from a some point within two neighboring atoms of 
different sort with their axes of motions intersecting 
or terminating each other's path of motion at some 
angle to surface of impact, and as with one traversing 
its path of outer vibration three times to the other 
four in recurring concomitancy: — then it is evident 
that the values of concurrence are nine in twelve of 
the outer vibrations of the slower particle, and twelve 
to nine of the quicker — (number of conjuctions to 
time, depending upon space to time traversed (quick- 
ness) in vibration, and ratios of conjunction to non- 
conjunction in their particular least common concur- 
rences of vibration to impact) ; etc. of any number of 
particles colliding of any angles of direction in their 
paths of compressed or distended conditions of mo- 
tion, and velocities and amplitudes to conjunctions 
terminal or crossings path of vibration. [See Tyndall's 
Molecular Physics Memoir 1 Sec. 12, 14, and Memoir 
2 etc; also Protoplasm of Plants and cell life of ani- 
mals Huxley and other: — of Tyndall-, as with a cau- 
tion that a vacuum is a delusion,- in that of an; ethe- 
real something (atomic gas likely) electrically pon- 
derable and permeate of all inter stical and airy space 
molecular if not outside planetary space — solar 
(stellar) radiation of light (certain intensities of ra- 
dial electricity,-17) requiring a medium of transmis- 
sion,- as radiative impact of gaseous atoms vibrately 
incapable of combination into molecules (likely) or 
solidity (surely) by any existing low temperature — 29. 
Denial of a medium contact, is to resort to an emana- 
tion of something everyway across space] 
123 



a Unit vibrations of concert matter and force in 
manner of potential, are distinguished as conductive 
vibrations when circumscribed in directions parallel, 
and radiative vibrations when uncircumscribed in di- 
rections radiative: — and temperature of conductive or 
radiative vibrations side to side the atoms of molecule. 
[7 m &&1 

b. Unit vibrations of matter and force in distinct 
fields of insulation or contact, and varying of poten- 
tial (vibratory momentum) in like mediums, are as 
vibrations alike in factoral amounts of matter vibra- 
ting, and direction of vibrations respective the atoms, 
but often unlike in amplitude intensity or both in 
vibration; and as distinct (untouching) fields of unit 
momentum in unlike mediums, are as vibrations unlike 
or resembling in amounts of matter vibrating, direc- 
tions of vibrations, amplitudes of vibration, and in- 
tensities of vibration. [See radiative and conductive 
powers of heat electricity and sound through different 
kinds and quantities of solids liquids and gases by 
any good author ; also consult if at hand Mellonies and 
Magnuses experiments with heat on solids liquids and 
gases. & Heat, temperature tending or ending in dis- 
solution: cold, temperature tending or ending in 
chilled (nearly inactive}consolidation — 27] 

c. Unit vibrations concert of matter and force 
electrically conductive radiative or equilibriate, are 
always concomitant of conductive radiative or equil- 
ibriate magnetisms of sort potential of any point of 
induction as intensities of electric impact * : — mag- 
netism in distinct fields of induction, reciprocative 
when of like times of impulse, and unreciprocative 
when of unlike times o f impulse. 



* See moments of declination in any magnetized needle 
concomitant latitudinal impulses recurrent from latitudinal 
waves of changed potentials passing from evening heats to 
morning colds,- and thermopile of heat and magnetism; and 
that in moments of inclination of needle to concomitant longi- 
tudinal impulses recurrent of longitudinal waves of higher to 
lower potentials passing from equatorial heats to magnetic 
centers of polar colds,- and thermopile of equatorial heats and 

124 



By magnetism always concomitant of electricity-, 
it follows that the laws of magnetism, are but con- 
comitant laws of electricity:- as conductive (paramag- 
netic) magnetisms extending along lines of conductive 
(paralectric) electricity, and radiate (diamagnetic) 
magnetisms extending along radiates of radiant (di- 
electric) electricity, and potential as inverse squares 
of distance nearly from source of transmutation — 
conductive electricity always a transmitter of a por- 
tion of its electricity into radiant electricity, and con- 
comitant radiative magnetism; and radiative elec- 
tricity of opportunity a transmitter of a portion of 
its electricity into other conductive electricity and con- 
comitant cylindrical magnetism radiate of core, and 
slightly conical between sectional sources, or source 
of equilibrium. 

24a Masses molecules or atoms of matter and 
force (inorganic or cellular) disintegrated or disin- 
tegrating and passing to other masses or molecules of 
sort greater or more coincident of magnetic impulse 
than other neighboring force oppositional is massive 
molecular or atomic integration; separation contrary, 
massive molecular or atomic disintegration. 

Massive integration-, exampled in all aglutinates 
and precipitates of silt sand shell pebbles etc in flow 
and still waters air etc., and all other collections of 



polar magnetism. [Of electricity transmuted into heat vice 
versa of this, illustrated in the sun a huge ball of radiant elec- 
tricity beginning externally of certain conditions of heat trans- 
mutable into radiant electricity (and not of other conditions as 
sob spot, dark core of flame etc) and transmuted into heat by 
contact with our atmosphere and the surface of the earth a 
iransmuter of it into heat and absorbent of it organically etc, 
or reflect of it outward by convection and radiation in space 
gaa. See in the Bolometer passed over the spectrum tempera- 
tare increased when passing beyond the dark lines into light; 
also see lunar heat variable as variation of its phases in light. 
August temperature of the air twelve miles up, at eighty de- 
grees below zero, shows space intensely cold.] 

125 



massive matters of sort cellularly or artificially con- 
structive collective or distributive of wealth. [All, de- 
pendent upon a prior or concomitant disintegration,- 
a factoral source of supply]. 

Molecular or atomic integration,- exampled of all 
orderly condensations of liquid and gaseous substances 
of sort into infinite combiations of thing crystallic veg- 
etable and animal, and all recombinations of atomic 
matters of sort (27 c) into infinite kinds of thing va- 
riably solid liquid or gaseous [27 b. See crystallization 
and recombination physical, and growth cellular of 
plant and animal life]. 

x Of molecular or atomic integration-, molecules 
and atoms of like times of vibration simple, or their 
least common concurrences and a greater amount of 
force combine of contact or inductive vicinity to new 
compounds or consolidations of integration; while 
those unlike in their times of impulse and lesser of 
force remain apart of contact or vicinity to resisting 
compounds (other likenesses) of prior integration. *I 
[Intensity of adhesion or cohesion, is as amount of 
matter coordinate the same, rapidity of vibration, in- 
verse globe radi of distance, and value of concomitant 
impulse] . 



*I See compound of atoms, and appropriative and elimi- 
native phenomena of plant and animal integration and disin- 
tegration protoprasmic of osmotic selection and repudiation or 
excretion — see molecules or atoms protoplasmic selecting os- 
mosely of tissue or other cell wall, their respective constitu- 
ents to alterative compound or severance of sort and expulsion 
or freeing of elements eliminate of waste, or to other systematic 
supply conjunctive of organization; also, see nerve and their 
terminals concertly insulate of tissue or other cell wall unlike 
to momentary or longer stimula, and muscular other magnetism 
of elements oftener alike in electric and magnetic impulse 
within. [Of contest between masses molecules or atoms to 
physical or cellular integration or change within or no of others 
between, and amount of matter intensity and distance equal of 
potency, those of a greater concomitancy of impulse with the 
intermediate prevail. Of link or alter of differing substances by 
an intermediate, the concomitances thus impotently less of the 
extremes than their respective resistances oppositional of other-/ 2 r 

126 



c Of massive or molecular disintegration-, see 
decay or other dissolution of thing in decomposition 
digestive, and dissolution of thing in heat water air 
alcohol etc variable of temperature; of fracture-, in- 
stance ruptures of violence or molecular defects phys- 
ical vegetable or animal — violence, as of attrition im- 
pact break bite cut tear crush etc. 

24b Change of massive molecular or atomic 
phenomena of kind into other massive molecular or 
atomic phenomena of kind, is transmutation. 

M Massive molecular or atomic vibration of sort 
to contact with other mass molecule or atom differ- 
ent in sort and greater of force, is transmutable into 
the other mass molecular or atomic vibration in time 
as their discrepancies of force and times of conjunc- 
tion variably coincide to incoincide of time to contact 
and transfer of one into the other: — thus of impact 
or pressure transferred into reacting or equilibriate 
elasticity, or recoil (elasticity) into movement or equi- 
poise-, the transmutation is proportional to immediate 
intensity of impact pressure or recoil in massive or 
unit transfer of movement and force; while of con- 
ductive phenomena into radiative phenomena or vice 
versa-, the transfer is as the intensity of force im- 
mediate and the times of conjunction in resultant unit 
impacts of kind to kind in form. [19, 23] 

Of massive movement or equilibrium (solid or 
fluid) transferred into other movement or equilibrium 
solid or fluid-, the amount of momentum transferred 
of ore into the other, is exactly equivalent. [For ex- 
amples of the phenomena-, see mass movement or pres- 
sure of a solid transferred of contact into conjoined 
other solid movement or equipoise; and propulsion or 
retardation of solids by movement or pressure of air 
or water, and vice versa]. 

m Of heat transmuted into work electricity or 
chemism-, an amount of heat disappears equivalent to 
work electricity or chemism produced ; and when work 
electricity or chemism is expended in generation of 
heat-, the heat generated, is equivalent to work elec- 
tricity or chemism expended: [Heat of the first ex- 
ample here, is but unit momentums of kind named 
heat transmuted of impact into massive motion or elec- 
127 



tricity — (polar vibrations) ; and work or electricity 
of the second example, is but massive or electric mo- 
mentums of sort transmuted of friction or impact into 
heat: — heat, unit vibrations lateral of any angle 
(7 M & &) to polar vibrations; and electricity and 
temperature (23 b &) differential to each other in 
transmutation of vibration from the one a higher to 
the one a lower condition of unit momentum,- inci- 
dentally brought about of escape of the one to the 
other. [23 *] 

n Of electricity and work of any kind, exampled 
in the fundamental experiments of electro-magnet- 
ism : — as whenever any work of kind is performed by 
an agency as electricity-, an amount of electricity, dis- 
appears of electro-magnetism to work performed and 
that escaping to heat; and whenever work is spent in 
generating electricity-, the electricity generated, is 
equivalent to work expended minus that transmuted 
of the same time to heat,- and thus wasted to elec- 
tricity. [27 See Mechanics of Natural Philosophy]. 

25 Change of the arrangement of factors in the 
combination or function of mass molecule or atom 
(apart or whatever way combined) within a same con- 
cert of matter and force or individuality other, is 
structural or functional isomerism. 

Structural isomerism, ever an any change of mas- 
sive molecular or atomic arrangement within a same 
thing at one time to another time; functional isomer- 
ism, a change of cause and movement formative or 
qualitative within a same thing one time to another : — 
of isomerism massive in quantity-, exampled of all 
massive and molecular change of form and quality in 
metallic bend flatten thicken narrow lengthen shorten 
soften harden stress strain etc within a same collection 
of metal; change of structural and functional tissues 
initiatory to maturity of plant and animal growth: 
change of things gas into things liquid; things liquid 
into things solid ; things solid into things liquid ; things 
liquid into things gas ; things cold into things hot, and 
vice versa; electricity into heat, and vice versa; light 
(white) into primitive colors (kind), and vice versa; 
the bad of disposition into good (conversion or reform) , 
and vice versa — (3 $ $, 7 M &) ; ignorance or prejudice 
(a prior state) into knowledge or candor, and vice 

128 



versa occasionally — (see power of iteration here for- 
mative and changeful of character, and conservative 
keep of it — 16 &) ; also isomeration of word 
(61 m, 1 %, * f &), etc of all molecular change with- 
in : for atomic isomerism alone-, see changes of chem- 
ical equivalence in atoms to aggregation, or change of 
atomic arraignment within a same molecule; and for 
massive and elementary isomerism combined-, see all 
concatenate changes instance or sum an any body and 
limbs (conscious and unconscious (11 A *) to an any 
or all kinds of recreation and labor specialized, and 
elasticity and recoil of mass and molecular and atomic 
disturbance of stress strain or impact: also see iso- 
meric development of the brain nerves mind and body 
in training example say so caprice genius and habit 
child to manhood (46 *, *I, 22 x) or generation to 
generation and their any conservations and reforms 
of sort as the case may be — (3 $ $, 3 x, 65) ; also, sen- 
sation (8 * *, 3 x) emotion motive volition and do 
ever isomeric changes of sort in nervous (11 A * z) 
and muscular function — a molecular and cellular 
rhythmic rearrangement of themselves in place and 
displace of each other incident of recipient and motor 

[Note continued from page 126] 
co-ordinate function, are united or varied by their concomitances 
with the intermediate stronger than that same of another in 
opposition: — thus concomitancy of extremes three to seven can 
be united with an intermediate five in potency when their con- 
comitancies are stronger than the opposition keeping* the ex- 
tremes apart — three to five and five to seven greatly stronger 
than three to seven; etc. to any chain branch return or involu- 
tion concert of linking function growth,- restorative eliminative 
or preparartive a system of function co-operative or parasitic. 
In organic growth systematically concert, see elementary divi- 
sion budding or granule of parent cell to transfer and embryonic 
collection or other growth of the same systematically linked in 
likeness and unlikeness of parts parental (part to part) in 
succession — see digestion secretion and embryology of Carpenter, 
and plant growth of any latest and best author — Prelim <£, 
11 n nJ] 

129 



forces conductive to sensation motive volition etc same 
— so of all incidental forces on all elementary sub- 
stances other of stress strain or impact. Of stress, see 
pressure external by an any something same, and pres- 
sure internal of absorption capillary and heat vibra- 
tory: Of impact-, see movement massive transferred 
into other mass motion or elementary disturbance ex- 
pansive (27), and elementary expansion of massive 
heated or electric impact transferred into massive 
movement or conduction or radiation elementary. 

LIMITS OF CAUSE MOVEMENT AND EQUI- 
LIBRIUM. 

I 

26 All causes of an any time of function, are 
confined (limited) to the any all equal and unequal 
oppositions of matter and force (instantaneous or 
other), coordinate their any effects of the time and 
place. 

All motions and all equilibriums of an any time of 
motion or equilibrium, are confined to the any all anti- 
thecal conditions of thing coordinate of their matters 
of motion or equilibrium variably unequal or equal of 
force. 

Consecutive causes motions and equilibriums of 
kind, are confined to the any existing conditions of 
thing conjoined in continuous periodic or occasional 
cause, and times of unequal and equal conditions of 
force coordinate of the any things to motion or equi- 
librium. [And so of all massive movements equi- 
libriums conductions radiations transmutations or re- 
combinations ad infinitum of the any all concatenatious 
of physical vegetable and animal life consecutive of all 
existence. 22 * *.] 

TRANSFER OF MOVEMENT OR MATTER IN 
MOLECULAR AND ATOMIC CAUSE. 

27 a Of transfer of movement and its momen- 
tum (only) between higher and lower activities of 
atomic vibration to other atoms molecules or masses-, 
the higher momentums, decrease of activity and force 
to lower increase of activity and force proportional 
to ratio of momentums, higher to lower, and least 

130 



common concurrences of unit impacts to time in kinds 
of thing juxtaposed : — all as conductions radiations or 
massive movements direct, or of transmutation of one 
into the other; and all as atomic momentums of sort 
transferred to any neighboring molecular or massive 
movement or vice versa. [Molecules in their internal 
oscillations atomic, are variably stationary and con- 
nected to each other in solids, variably more adhesive 
and connected than nonadhesive and disconnected in 
liquids, and variably more repulsive and disconnected 
than adhesive or cohesive in restricted gases. 



b Of unit transfer of movement and momentum-, 
units of solids liquids or gases of higher to lower in- 
tensities of vibration, contract of volume in all vibra- 
tory fall of factors (23 a) to lower centers of attrac- 
tion within, and distend of volume in all vibratory 
rise of unit factors to centers of internal attraction : — 
all as expansion of units to other contraction of units 
differentially transposed of solids of any less solidity 
to solids of some other densifying solidity; liquids of 
any rarefied fluidity to fluids other of any densifying 
liquidity or some solidity; or gases of any rarefied 
gaseousness to fluids of other any densifying gaseous- 
ness or some liquidity : or vice versa-, of solids of any 
densefied solidity to solids of other any less solidity or 
some liquidity; liquids of any densefied fluidity to 
fluids of any rarefying liquidity or some gaseousness, 
or gases of any densefied fluidity to fluids of any rare- 
fying gaseousness. [Of vapors, as vapors always sub- 
ject to transfer of their molecules in gravity,- by units 
of greater vibratory distension lying of its change of 
state lower in gravity, and units of less vibratory dis- 
tension by radiation to cooler or colder conditions 
spacial or other lying higher in gravity, and to fall 
and concomitant push (pressure) of the lighter (heat- 
ed) units of kind (at the earth's surface or other) to 
a greater elevation in gravity — (all as cycles of rise 
and fall of molecules fluid by receipt (lower in grav- 
ity), and loss (higher in gravity) of expansive forces 
in higher and lower potentials of rhythmic tempera- 
ture) : — exampled in vapor to rainfall and flow of 
waters to lower planes of the earth's surface, and their 
evaporation elevation transfer and condensation to 

131 



rain of other places and flow again ad finem such con- 
ditions; also of water air and other gases of artificial 
and natural conditions of cause in visible and invisible 
convection and flows to return of place — see Tyndall's 
Molecular Physics Memoir 8.] 

Of examples of transfer of unit movements and 
momentums from a higher to a lower activity atomic 
molecular or massive-, exampled of atomic phenomena 
in all radiations or conductions of heat from a hotter 
source to a cooler or cold place of such medium of 
radiation or conduction; all radiations or conductions 
of sound from a source of sound (a greater intensity 
of sound vibration) to a lower place of sound vibration 
in a medium of radiation or conduction of sound ; and 
all radiations or conductions of electricity from an 
electric source to a lower condition of electric vibra- 
tion direct or transmutative of radiant or conductive 
electricity: of molecular phenomena-, exampled of all 
transfer of heat (movements) into melting solids, and 
evaporating liquids; and vice versa-, of transfer of 
heat away from gaseous liquid or solid condensations 
of kind and amount to massive or unit fall of matter 
in attraction — (rain hail etc) : and of massive phe- 
nomena-, exampled in transfer of heat sound or elec- 
tricity into massive motions,- by unit pressures, or 
magnetism of electricity; vice versa-, of massive mo- 
tions (momentum) transposed into heat sound or elec- 
tricity of any massive impact or friction. 



c Of transfer of matter as molecules or atoms 
of solid and solid, solid and fluid, and fluid and fluid 
of an any approximation to other external attraction 
greater than their own resistances to it within, ex- 
change or simply transfer their matter and force to 
other recombination,- as other adhesion or cohesion 
anew: — of selection into kind, as ever imperceptibly 
changing (16 *) impulses or any least common con- 
currences of impulse like and ratios of force in their 
times of vibration determine — (24 €j[) ; of time place 
and amount-, all as that of an any coordinative nexus 
of kind in differing temperatures and factoral supply 
determine; of duration in kind, as durations of inte- 

132 



gration and resistances greater to dissolution (25) 
determine of all conditions of thing to combination 
and preservation final to other incidental forces of dis- 
solution and other integration,- ad infinitum of all 
evolution and devolution. [16 <§>]. 

d. Molecules of fluids vibratorily falling of con- 
tracting amplitudes (decrease of volume) toward any- 
solidifying centers of adhesion and cohesion of a same 
quantity, or with other neighboring molecules juxta- 
posing to supply, arrange themselves by a nexus of 
solidifying magnetisms (selective of kind to kind as 
likeness or similarity of impulse and amount of force, 
and sines to cosines of unit transfers) into variably 
regular or irregular forms physical vegetable or ani- 
mal:- of varying forms magnitudes and densities, as 
quantities and varieties of matter and force selected 
of part to part of any physical vegetable or animal 
nucleus to co-ordination in sort, and the any environing 
condition of things the concatenate forces of supply 
determine — (and of form length breadth thick- 
ness and density, as amount of matter to space equi- 
libriate or moving in each of all parts, and distances 
and directions of each and all factors parts to part 
from any central point points line or lines of matter 
joined of an any form density and size) : and that 
of disintegration and return to other like individuals 
of a same kind-, all as return of thing through any 
number of unlike individuals integrated and disinte- 
grated intermediate as intermediate conditions of 
things coincide to incoincide with that of any prior 
condition of things successive to gradual change of 
kind. [16 A *, 59 b. Nothing in a form not before in 
a supply,- matter or force]. 

SOURCES OF FORGE TO TRANSFER OF MATTER 
OR MOVEMENT. 

28. Sources of force to transfer of matter or 
movement, are the any collected activities of matter 
and force greater of potentiality than other connected 
activities of opposition — (all as that to let-on activi- 
ties of instinct or volition, or natural escape to lower 
activities of force other) : — exampled of any collec- 

133 



tions of force insulated or recombinative of locality to 
transfer of matter or movement through electro-mag- 
neto attraction direct, or of impact, stress or strain 
indirect (massive molecular or atomic), and physical 
vegetable animal or contrived in form and amount. 
[Of transfer of activity conductive or radiative-, all as 
transfers of movement from sources of sort through 
any parallels direct reflective or refractive of unit im- 
pacts in confinements of motor and resistant tangents 
of impact easier of time and direction to conduction 
than that circumscribing them of greater incoincidence 
of conditions to receipt of vibratory activity: or as 
transfer of activity through any some partial to whole 
radiations of a source through tangents or sines of 
uncircumscription widening and waning of potential 
as inverse square of distance nearly from source or 
points of transmutation (conductive to radiative) 
terminal other opposition equal, or reversely greater. 
See volition nerve and ganglia here to do (3 $ $) , and 
object nerve and ganglia to know — 3#]. 

Of examples of source to transfer of matter or 
movement exampled of all aggregations of heat as 
fires, electrical transmutations, or chemical actions 
@ of any some greater activity than conductive or 
radiative environment; in artificial contrivances for 
electricity, and natural sources,- as sun thunder clouds, 
etc.; and any artificial contrivances and natural re- 
sources of sort to massive or molecular movements of 
infinite variety and amount in kind,- as that of ma- 
chinery coordinated or not with gravity (as the loco- 
motive), attractions of the sun planets and stars to 



@ See oxidization of the blood by cells (little chemical 
furnaces) to heat and its transfer through veins (pipes) to all 
parts of the body and radiation into lower conditions of heat, 
or to some immediate cellular transmutation into variably higher 
electric and magnetic potential (24 x) to some chemical or 
expulsive action or afferency and motivity or no to other supply 
or elimination vessicular or external. [11 e y @, 23 a, 25] 

134 



planetary movements of kind, and all concussions or 
pressures of mass, to fracture of kind, other mass 
movements or equilibriums of kind, or other unit pre- 
nomena of kind. 



THE SOLAR SYSTEM INDICE OF NATURAL 
LAW AND SOLAR PHENOMENA. 

29 By varying electro-magneto concerts of force 
in distinct fields of magnetism (23) as primary fact- 
ors to cause, and all concerted antagonistic other forces 
as indirect cause (18)-, let the reader collect to mind 
varying gravity of the sun (or any sun), and all its 
environment to nature and position of the planets in 
solar space and time relative to their electro-magneto 
conditions of attraction (21 m) and distance coordin- 
ated against some necessary antithetical counter forces 
centrifugal, to coordination of planetary cometary or 
meteoric motion orbital: — all that of any solar varia- 
tion of electro-magnetism between extreme heats of 
the sun and zodiacal solar cold (as variable effects 
of any sun in prevailing planetary recession with may 
be temporary approaches to outward order of plane- 
tary cycle), and opposing coordinated stellar attrac- 
tion behind any planet to sun, and that of a zodiacal 
impact of current flow turbinically centrifugal and 
originating at the sun to centrifugal waste of itself 
and gaseous planetary and other motion : — centrifugal 
force, of zodiacal currents intensely tornadal of space 
gas (a medium necessarily implied to conveyance of 
light vibrations) with an equator of stronger flow 
(zodiacal eccliptic) centrifu gaily radial from the sun 
and lateral divergence from it a center (variable like- 
ly) to a conflict at sides with a vortex of incoming 
polar currents (coalescely reverse of the outgoing 
ones) funnelized at solar bi-polar contact with the 
sun — zodiacal currents, produced by intense heat ex- 
pansion of unit matters in the sun through collision 
of scattered planetary masses (dissolved of prior plan- 
etary unification) at the poles of the sun from tremen- 
dous plunges from zodiacal intense currents verge with 
solar polar currents in their great zodiacal elevations, 
and intense pressures of cold units in tremendous vor- 

135 



texes of solar polar pressures converged from intensely 
cooled and elevatetd zodiacal currents outward in cycle. 
[All a pointer to planet origin near the sun from con- 
densations of gaseous eruptions arrested in zodiacal 
currents to return in the sun (see solar phenomena) 
by gradual cooling of recession into a liquid and less 
elastic external, then a solid and liquid crust with a 
gaseous envelope coalescing with a gaseous medium * ; 
of time-, as planets of variable distance in recession 
and times of origin that changef ully recede in outward 
order of planetary cycle,- through a condensating 
crust (interior a fluid intensely elastic and centrifu- 
gally dense), and accompanying planetary phenomena 
(of .certain tetmperatures of heat to a frozen condition 
beginning at the poles and ending at the equator), to 
final dissolution of their masses in weak magnetisms 
of lower temperatures in zodiacal cold (see liquid air 
experiments), and final collision with poles of the sun 
to other gaseous eruptions to other planetary origin 
and phenomena ad finem or infinitum f : & but as with 
may be increments of mass- and units more centrally 
poised (a Fig. 6) in zodiacal greater impulses of cur- 
rent to accumulated momentum, and stellar attraction 
passing out of the suns current and attraction into stel- 
lar space, and some prevailing stellar attraction, spa- 
cial of other conjoined currents and attraction of a 
neighboring sun to other solar aggregation; and vice 
versa of other increments coming into the sun's in- 
fluence from other spacial or solar disintegrations 
same. # All as planets comets or meteors poised be- 
tween varying sun varying stellar attraction, varying 
attractions of planetary perturbation, and varying zo- 



t "And I saw a new heaven and a new earth — for the 
first heaven and first earth had passed away." [Revelation.] 

* See Encyclopedia Brittanica subject Geology and sub- 
subject Geogony. Gaseous liquefaction and solidification (27 b), 
a matter of decreasing temperature (here by radiation into 
space) suitable to each kind or combination of kind. 

136 



diacal currents waning outwardly by greater distance 
from the sun, and waning again laterally by greater 
divergence from zodiacal center of stronger flow. And 
that as current matters surrounding the sun-, point as 
such certain phenomena known as The Zodiacal Light, 
The Sun's Corona, etc; with light and shade on the 
sun's exterior, and apparent rotation an immense trop- 
ical current of gaseous matters radiant of heat con- 
verted into radiant electricity called light, and sun 
spot depressed areas of heat incoincident to light, and 
dark to vision; and as laterally rotating by pressure 
of currents from opposite poles solar toward equator 
internal — rotation of the sun apparent only. And that 
as current matters with attraction of a planet and 
stars against the sun, and variably more coincident 
than incoincident after conjunction, cooperate with 
attraction of the sun and that variable of a planet (as 
distance and angle of planetary attraction to its any 
moon attendant is to radi of sun through the planet) 
in opposing currents and stellar attraction after oppo- 
sition to turn and return of lunar movement,- slowly 
expanding as the earth recedes, and decrease in mag- 
netic intensity consequent ; and as with diurnal motion 
of a planet (slowly diminishing of recession), pro- 
duced by magnetism of morning cold greater at infinite 
angles within the side of a planet in the morning side 
(23 *), to radi of the sun through the planet (as 
greater magnetism of morning side, and greater heat 
pressures oppocite of evening heats,- a huge latitud- 
inal thermopile) , and gaseous expansion by equatorial 
heats (rotating) of greater pressure than other less 
elastic parts to pressure against rotating side of the 
earth opposite of direction, but cooperative with that 
of morning magnetism. And that as zodiacal currents 
varying laterally and longitudinally from equator of 
greater flow of distance from the sun, and stellar mag- 
netism coordinated against solar attraction, are as 
currents and stellar attraction that become causes of 
cometary motion: — as by solar attraction greater at 
certain distances and lateral positions of a cometary 
mass than centrifugal motion of current in its any 
lateral position and stellar attraction to approximate 
fall toward the sun in velocities and resistances part to 
137 



part as unsolidifying densities variable, and magnetic 
forces tension (hold) of the more dense to less dense 
parts against resistances of the medium; and that the 
opposite of function after perhelion,- in currents and 
momentums near the sun greater of potentiality 
than former attractions, and to a reversion of come- 
tary motion as apparent repulsion of cometary mat- 
ters inversely of densities inertia to current and mag- 
netic attractions of differing parts in density to cur- 
rents lead of varying localities lateral to central flow 
of zodiacal current to completion of turn and return 
movement, or arrest in planetary attraction, or solar 
polar current. 



x In a repetitive but more particularized expo- 
sition of the Solar System here educed-, it will be 
necessary to refer to the sun as a center of solar things 
surrounded with an equatorial zone of current out- 
flows of gaseous matters (intensely hot at the sun) 
turbinically originating at the sun's equatorial zone, 
and widening from a plane of central flow to lateral 
flows that shade away into collisions with incoming 
funnelized polar currents (a, b Fig. 6, 21 m), and 
coalescences further out with regular returning cur- 
rents funnelized of the sun's two poles as two immense 
pressures there to outgoing currents in cycle ad finem : 
and then to take into mind the almost daily eruption 
of gases from the sun by immense impacts polar and 
repulsions equator, to thenceforth be whirred about 
the sun to a meteoric solidity, cometary insolidity, or 
planetary formation: — the latter by gradual recession 
into cooler regions, a condensation to a thin then thick- 
ening crust, and other phenomena in its kind,- chrys- 
tallic of solidity from beneath, and precipitate or sedi- 
mentary of solidity outside, watery airly etc., com- 
mingled and above, and organic of their mixtures in 
compound: — all as crystallization, stratification, rup- 
ture wateryness, areality, other fluidity, and proto- 
plasm and plant and animal life to termination in 
great recessions of space too cold for life, and final 
dissolutions of planetary mass in lost magnetisms and 
high elevations to tremendous plunges (of times of 
coalescence with polar currents) into the sun to other 
gaseous eruptions, and planetary phenomena ad in- 

138 



finitum or ad finem sl solar system. [Thus planetary- 
suspension in space, and gradual recession into higher 
regions of solar way indicated by current repulsion (a 
centrifugality continuous), and a hemisphere of stel- 
lar attraction in opposition of the sun: — opposing 
stellar attraction (that behind the planet to sun), 
greatly to lessly more interfered with than its opposite 
side to stellar attraction,- by greater conflict of the 
sun's attraction radiant of any some great area and 
a greater potentiality in rhythmic conflict, concomit- 
ant to noncomitant of stellar impulses on that side of 
the sun a greater interfering potential. Of planetary 
recession, find retardation of daily motion by the year 
or longer, then as actual daily motion of any present 
year or longer, is to the any corrected time distant so 
will length of siderial motion of the any present time 
be to the length of siderial motion of the a some dis- 
tant time plus retardation of velocity — velocity wan- 
ing with current and attraction in recession. 



139 



(Figure 6) 




SOLAR CURRENTS. 

S sun; a, a equator of outward current continu- 
ing of waste or gain to coalescence with polar return 
of inward flow b, b. [The figure must be conceived a 
globe of currents one in total, and correlative and con- 
servative of potential] . 

Diurnal motion of a planet, thus occurring by 
magnetism of planet on the side quarter of morning 
cold greater to a magnetic catch of sun attraction than 
that less magnetic of the opposite side; and coopera- 
tive of a heat expansion to pressure on sunny quarter 

140 



of a planet's greatest heat or warmth to cooperative 
push (elastic of a rotating wave of expanded air con- 
fined between the earth and space gas in gravity) of 
planet in that quarter, and of an opposite direction to 
sun's attraction pull of magnetic morning cold to ro- 
tary motion of a planet — Figure 7. 



(Figure 7) 




DIURNAL MOTION AND CAUSE. 

S sun, and p planet ; a resultant attractions of the 
sun in morning cold (rotary) greater than that of its 
warmer side (thermopilic heat), and as with the point 
of the angle denoting direction of force in pull : b the 
resultant force of pressure by expansion of the air 
(or medium) on the opposite quarter from the angle 
placed here to denote direction of force — the push 
occuring by a relatively greater expansion of medium 
passing between the planets evening quarter as e, and 
the medium between it and the sun as n; and the pull 
occurring by greater attraction of the planet in its 
morning quarter of cold as m the magnetic end of the 
planets lateral and rotating thermopile. 
141 



(Figure 8) 




LUNAR MOTION AND CAUSE. 



S sun, x x stellar attraction, and p planet; a, b, 
c, d first second third and fourth quarters of m, m, m, 
m moon in the ends of her quarters : — motion of first 
and second quarters, are of momentum, planetary at- 
traction, current impact (n) and stellar attraction (x) 
coordinated against sun attraction; and of third and 
fourth quarter, of momentum, planetary attraction of 
the sun against stellar attraction (x) , and current im- 
pact: s, s', s" motor secants of sun attraction current 
impact and stellar attraction s, s', s" resisting secants 
of sun attraction, current impact, and stellar attrac- 
tion; t, t', t", t, t', t", si, si', si", si, si', si" their tan- 
gents and sines. [For secants radi tangents and sines 
of momentum, construct them to each quarter as mc 
etc. of Fig. 2]. 

142 



Lunar motion from conjunction to opposition 
(first and second quarters), occurring of planetary- 
attraction, stellar attraction, momentum, and impact 
of outward current, coordinated against attraction of 
the sun a resistance to first and second quarters of 
lunar motion; and from opposition to conjunction 
(third and fourth quarter) by planetary attraction, 
sun attraction and momentum coordinated against im- 
pact of current flow (outward) and stellar attraction. 
[Stellar attraction, as of a hemisphere of stars revolv- 
ing (apparently) opposite the sun. Eccentricity of re- 
volving perigee and apogee, occurring of lunar posi- 
tion nearer to remoter the sun in new and old moon, 
and varying forces other in perhelion to aphelion — 
attraction and impact of current flow variably greater 
an approach to the sun giving an increased impetus 
to lunar motion oblongated in its increased orbital mo- 
mentum] . 

X Planetary origin thus of gaseous eruptions 
from the sun (mineral and all other) , and decreasing 
temperatures outward, of recession (increasing den- 
sity and magnetism centrifugally within), and a cool- 
ing of the exterior to this water yness aireality sedi- 
ment and plant and animal life (before this elemen- 
tarily accompanying)-, it can be quite surely inferred 
that first vegetable and animal life of a first oppor- 
tunity must necessarily have originated at or near the 
poles,- by a planet's position to the sun first render- 
ing those parts of temperature suitable to growth and 
development of plant and animal life ; while more equa- 
torial parts yet awhile were too hot by great proximity 
to the sun for plant and animal life to exist ; and con- 
sequently (as varying geographical distributions and 
development of plants and animal indicate) in reces- 
sion becoming greater, and approach of life toward 
the equator becomes feasible, and abandonment of the 
poles (slowly vibrating) becomes necessary by too 
great cold for plant and animal life to exist — (33) : — 
therefore recession of a planet simply into space neces- 
sitates the beginning of life in sea land and supply of 
kind at or near the poles of their time, and fates the 
extinction of it at an equator becoming too cold for 
143 



plant and animal life longer to exist # • [See Geo- 
graphical Distribution of Plants and Animals in Dar- 
win's Origin of Species — (a grand slide in and out of 
tremendous changes to life) : — glacial change of place, 
but a change of the poles over polar parts of the earth's 
surface (glacial of suitable places general within forty 
degrees latitude about) concomitant variations of ec- 
centricity of the earth's orbit (greater part) and vari- 
ations of apside to equinox — see changing values of 
apside equinox and variations of the magnetic needle. 
See Geology Cosmical Encyclopedia Brittanica. The 
races may be the white and copper from the north, the 
black from the south, and their meets the blend]. 



# See in this annihilation of a solar system by waste of 
immense ages, and an origin of one in solar space outside solar 
currents by casual impact of spacial matter in momentums of 
prevailing stellar attraction change of directions, and to collision 
original and surrounding spacial supplies equal or greater than 
radiation of potential into surrounding space without, and an 
evolution same to other disintegration ad infinitum: — note here 
interstellar matters moving in lines inter-spacial, planetary 
integration of external matters meteoric or gaseous, and infer- 
ence of the same in a growing stellar system conserved within 
itself and extraneously enlarged from without. [The universe 
as a whole, a stationary other than projection of part by current 
force into pure space, and tether or no of it by internal attrac- 
tion to return permanency, or waste of it in unresisted move- 
ment outward; vice versa of other the like to receipt from other 
space. The universe, a union of solid and other matter aggre- 
gate,- by a stellar gas extending to all regions of light and 
current flow orbital or linear: pure space, a limitless unresisting 
black nothing (vacancy absolute) extending to all space beyond 
unless partly occupied by other matters waste or organized 
ad finem.] 

144 



# See life in Mars now (1907) a product of immense 
irrigation dikes or both central, and a moisture condensation 
unprecipitatly polar and a temperature (18 A **) equatorial 
now unsuitable to a condensation of vabor in cloud phenomena 
destroyed, and surface condensation there the only water phe- 
nomena outside of irrigation : — by central colors and polar white- 
ness varying only by the season-, no cloud phenomena seems to 
exist in the planet — hence cloud precipitation gone, and moisture 
there now just the obverse of steam daily and condensation 
nightly of a hot planet before precipitation by traversing cloud 
awaiting an opportunity to escape in rain, or vanishing into un- 
perceptible vapor [16 A **. By parity of reinforced electricity 
telegraph-, it might be possible some how to reinforce the feeble 
asscilations of a telescope lens by a some electrified or chilled 
pressure or rarification of air or other gas or vacuum within a 
telescopic tube and lens — gases here natural or artificial of 
vaporized substances simple or mixed, and of natural or arti- 
ficial temperatures to a reinforcement of oscilliation; otherwise 
a singular or binocular concentration of several or many tele- 
scopes or lens or sections onto a singular or binocular lens. 
[See space gas (a vacuum of artificiality) likely a better trans- 
mitter of light that other substance; and a greatly chilled con- 
dition of substance, a less resistence to incident forces of radia- 
tion than a higher temperature — 23 b, 27 a]. 



Astronomical works so far fail to give position and move- 
ment of our planets cutting a solar equatorial plane of the 
heavens (not the earth's ecliptic) coincident with the sun's 
equator of current flow. Neither give any information of how 
our planetary orbits cut this solar equatorial ecliptic twice a 
year, and whether or no the longer side of their focii all point 
to the same or different sections of the heavens, or different sides 
of the solar ecliptic. 

145 



COORDINATES OF PRODUCTION, PRODUCTION 
AND PRODUCT IN WEALTH. 



30 Coordinates of production in wealth are the 
any organs of life a concert of function, and the any 
appropriated things of wealth as land sunshine water 
air animals implements machinery etc coordinated to 
other direct or indirect production of thing in wealth 
eligible and ineligible to other function or product in 
life: — all that of an any concerted structures of in- 
stinct and consciousness of sort superposed upon the 
physical vegetable and animal to the any appropria- 
tion elimination making mending growing gathering 
transporting distributing keeping or protecting of 
things of wealth. [Wealth here, a circumscribed por- 
tion of nature organic and inorganic] . 

X In wealth, organic matter and life, is to be 
distinguished from the purely physical,- in that of 
organic matter and force affecting consciousness as 
something as different in aggregation (see granule or 
cell) as that a perception of it and the purely physical 
— (see protein distinct its inorganic elements other) ; 
and knowledge resting wholly upon general experience 
connect or disconnect of an any object in present sen- 
sation or thought-, it follows by parity of matter and 
force as always concerted in the organic and physical 
consciously existent and recurring that organic matter 
and life (an ethereal correlative with the physical) in 
their component elements of intermediate disintegra- 
tion continue so in their transcendental periods of dis- 
integration material and immaterial in substance — 
(escapingly spiritous or ethereal likely to mingle with 
gaseousness transmigratory to other life or escape in 
space substance) : — then-, aggregation and diffusion 
filling the all of existence past present and to be-, it 
follows that organic matter and force ultimate of ag- 
gregation and diffusion, are necessitated to an absolute 
continuation of existence infinity past present and to 
be — aggregation, ever beginnings and endings indi- 
vidual, and elements ultimate, ever nonbeginning and 
nonending. [58, 23 *I, here, and Evolution of Individ- 
ual Life and its Properties, Ency. Brittanica ; also Ele- 

146 



mentary Embryology and Histology any. Soul, a some- 
thing in the brain and not the breath ; dissolved quicker 
by exposure (natural), than burial — cremation un- 
natural and deflective]. 

31 Productions and Products of Wealth, are the 
any two elements of cause and effect in ivealth termi- 
nate or potential to other appropriation (33 n) elim- 
ination grow gather make mend transport distribute 
keep or protect of things in sort useful and unuseful 
to life : — all as functions variably economic and ineco- 
nomic and valuable and non-valuable to product, and 
product terminate or variably coincident to incoinci- 
dent to other incident function or product in wealth. 

Then productive powers concert a unit of life and 
means of any time and place, are confined to the any 
things of its natural and artificial environment (free 
and monopolized) as supply, and its emotional im- 
pulses and intellectual abilities of action to coordina- 
tion of things of want: — quantitive and varietous as 
plentitude and scarcity of thing environing (whole or 
factor), activity of coordination, and opportunities 
used to refused of the any environment of supply. 

WEALTH PRODUCTION CONSUMPTION COST 
VALUE EGCHANGE SUPPLY DEMAND. 

32 All physical vegetable and animal forms of 
matter and force in appropriation to other beneficial 
or unbeneficial use of life and means, is essential and 
inessential wealth. 

x Essential and inessential wealth, a that in- 
stance of kind quantity place and time beneficial use- 
less or harmful to life in knowledge emotion motive 
volition disposition or other internal or external func- 
tion or product attendant: — for knowledge beneficial 
or harmful to life-, see all trifles of trusted informa- 
tions and examples of do true false clear or confuse 
of fact, and good or bad of conduct — (8 n n, z) : — ex- 
ample training habit and say-so (65 2) four prime 
rulers of thought and do — 3 $ $ f , 25. For the useless 
or harmful in knowledge-, see frivolous indefinite pro- 
lix rambling evading misleading and everlasting string 
and flush of words confuse our ever multiplying influ- 

147 



ences of thought and do. [See Civil Law a prolix 
evasion of natural right (43 *) and Romanism an 
elaborated daze of piety pomp and fraud. Verifiable 
knowledge outside of every day experience, yet of a 
few, and scrap of thought greatly there. 

33 Production in wealth is an any appropria- 
tion elimination grow gather make mend alter unfold 
transport keep protect preserve or distribute of thing 
in wealth beneficial useless or harmful to life or 
means. 

M Economic essential and efficient production in 
wealth, ever profitable to production in degree (42 fl 
<&<&), and ineconomic inessential and inefficient pre* 
duction same, ever a loss to production in degree,- and 
so far eliminative of function or product consequent 
* * : Admixtures of the economic essential or effi- 
cient with the ineconomic inessential or inefficient, is 
a variable value or worth of amount greatly to leastly 
beneficial useless or harmful to other production in 
wealth. 

n Appropriation and elimination in wealth, is 
the any taking receiving lifting disgorging putting 
occupying leaving avoiding refusing expelling sup- 
pressing intercepting repudiating wasting damaging 
or destroying of thing to other use of function or 
product in wealth — bodily, that to respiration temper- 
ature digestion dress or ornament beneficial useless 
or harmful to life through sensation thought emotion 
volition or disposition,- incident environing influences 
of art nature say so example training habit whim or 
discovery. [32 x, 3 f]. 

** The ineconomic and inefficient here in pro- 
duction always at the depletion of other potentials 
consumed (34) to it without a profit: — see in depletive 
production here all production that in the mesh of 
chances generally or outrightly brings in less to those 
patronizing it than their costs — enumerate of most 
insurance borrow speculation gambling prize medicine 
law officialism politics hobby crime idleness shiftless- 
ness indiscretions etc. Insurance twice as depletive as 
fire or death and both together three times or more 
depletive of wealth in others — hence if all business 
were conducted on the principle of insurance all in- 

148 



terests of sort would become extinct, and life a silence 
— 46 *. [See to all this the shrewd end of it in those 
behind insurance (see late scandals 1906) loan medi- 
cine politics gambling or prize (see bucket shops etc), 
and the dull end to it in those delusively patronizing 
the cheat. See further depletion necessary in all func- 
tions of wealth essentially protective and transferative 
of life and property, and functions of healthy enjoy- 
ment. [Depletion of wealth then, an any function 
without a potential to other function in facts present 
and consequent: depletion individual, a direct or in- 
direct transfer of potential for deceit whole or part 
(see Romanism), or an other commodity worth less 
than cost of former in other demands of wealth : — . 
see influences of the shrewd on the losing end of this 
continuous game of advantage in trade medicine law 
and officialism — officialism effective to this, an in- 
direct transfer by them of others potential to them- 
selves and others in combination with them and prin- 
cipals mostly to the raid — see high tariff revenue 
finance license jobbery etc. Cumbrous legislation trial 
technicality and evidence, a great waste of others 
potential and slip of monied crime and public civil 
justice — (interests of absent others little attended to 
in official life) : — of the civil here, see official or other 
negligence (or natural casualty even), and personal 
or other injury consequent accounted by a species of 
technical legerdemain a wrong by public innocence; also 
trumped up military claims adjudged a default (lift 
really) of other generations, and public rights lavish- 
ly and fraudulently filtered away to plotting and lift- 
ing others ravenously selfish. Of other depletion and 
an absentee suffering indemnifying public correlative-, 
see present studied postage rate same to this, and a 
free delivery spread of a journalistic lifting influence 
now running high into a people's millions, and a lifted 
half of an annual eighty millions of worthless harmful 
patent medicines and a legion of other cheats worked 
off on innocent patrons, and a morality of trade devas- 
tate of all society not saved by suffering other industry 
succor of it and self sustenance more — (46 * &) ; also 

149 



a half spoil now or near thirty-two hundred millions 
liftingly fought for every four years by a new install- 
ment of mad selfishness sane to spoil, and a dull delu- 
sion underneath it insane to succor: and world over-, 
see this all and more a one grand surging plunging 
plundering lifting collusion to a one dull self devouring 
and sleeping gaping or screaming delusion succor of 
it,- an unsuspected fraud and spoil. [43 @, 16 A @ 

€J<I The essential here of enjoyment or industry 
is to be distinguished from the lawful (43) in that 
of the lawful each units share of the essential (all 
other cut out by unlawfulness), is to be a portion of 
the essential proportional to lawful saving inheritance 
or gift (53) supply (38), and degree of productive 
economy efficiency and energy superintend of it and 
opportunities used to refused for it of any time and 
place — hence lawful enjoyment and industrial pro- 
duction must not be parasitic (55) of others, and 
never above or below lawful effort. [16 A * * <&.] 

x Of superintendence to decrease of costs or bet- 
terment of the any concatenate values of coordination 
or supply (38) in kind quantity place or time-, all 
forces to time expending in total or partial elimina- 
tion of natural and contrived things to wealth vari- 
ably ineconomic or inefficient to function or product, 
or substitution of an any existing means or modes of 
production to other more economic or efficient function 
or products, cheapens or betters kind quantity or dis- 
tribution proportionately: — then things (structures 
causings or effects apart or combined) to a variably 
ineconomic inefficient useless harmful or inequitable 
expenditure in production eliminated or transferred 
to other economic efficient essential or equitable use in 
wealth, is a direct or differential development of econ- 
omy efficiency essentiality or equity in wealth; vice 
versa, a development or conserve of ineconomy ineffi- 
ciency inessentiality or inequity to productive wealth 
— degree of either, depends upon the amount and 
kinds of potential to supply same coordinated (46 *) 
to economic and ineconomic efficient and inefficient 
essential and inessential and equitable and inequitable 
production, activities of coordination same, and oppor- 

150 



tunities used to refused in the productions of the any 
kinds of wealth. [Equity and inequity here, an esti- 
mate of amount only within the essentials (43), and 
an exclusion or inclusion of the useless or harmful — 
the harmful, a no use damage or destruction of that 
to, intelligence emotion volition disposition or bodily 
function direct, or means attendant.] 

34 All physical vegetable fatty nervous muscular 
instinctive intellectual emotional and volitional forces 
of sort expended in an any production of other prod- 
ucts to wealth, or lost of unrecovery ivaste dissolution 
no use or no god to wealth, is consumption. [46 jy. 

x Thoughtful informative exemplary coercive 
advisory petitional commendatory or persuasive ex- 
penditure of potential such motor a greater economy 
ineconomy efficiency inefficiency essentiality or inessen- 
tiality, is an expenditure of potential profitable dam- 
aging or destructive @ (33 *) to other power in 
wealth: expenditure same motor a greater equitable 
or inequitable distribution of wealth, influences a more 
lawful or unlawful distribution of kind or quantity to 
life. [Economy ineconomy efficiency inefficiency es- 
sentiality and inessentiality in production, are func- 
tions within the equitable or inequitable of distribu- 
tion; and economy ineconomy efficiency or inefficiency, 
are functions within the essential non-essential equit- 
able or inequitable of life. 

35 Cost, is amount of potential in kind to time 
expended directly and indirectly to and opportune a 
product of wealth beneficial useless or harmful to life. 
[Indirect of raid barter or price.'] 

@ Essentiality in wealth, a saving of all potentials natural 
and others (grown of agriculture forestry etc) now wasted in 
that unneeded harmful and destructive to other productions in 
essentiality present and to be: — see all intoxicants narcotics 
opiates and false notions of sort (11 b) effectively a clear loss 
quite of all potential in their production, and all their damages 
to other production or products consequent — (41 A*) : also all 
medical drugs appliances etc, and their costly administrations a 
dead loss to general wealth mostly and a damage restly; also all 
rascalities of crime disrespectable, and all deceptive liftings 
(36 m) of high place yet greatly respected or worshipped by a 
succoring credulousness below. [46 *] 

151 



36 Value, is coincidence or worth of supply 
(38) function or product to other eligible or concate- 
nate function or product above that useless harmful 
or destructive to life,- and a no value or minus value 
to wealth. [39 A *.] 

37 Exchange, is transfer of an any past pres- 
ent or future something {material intellectual emo- 
tional or doitive, - 46 *), for another past present or 

* future something {direct or through others,- 45) a 
potential or unpotential to other function or product 
in wealth,- lawful unlawful or both. [43.] 

m Supplies of wealth in kind and quantity pro- 
duced directly to personal use, or collected and dis- 
tributed of a regulated ownership or agency in places 
variably combinate protected or free, and central or 
ramifying in other wealth, are kinds quantities places 
times and measures of distribution (42) variably 
economic to ineconomic of cost, efficient to inefficient 
of value, equitable to inequitable of distribution, and 
beneficial to nonbeneficial of kind and quantity. ** 

** Of exchange a gain to one, and a more to less 
unremuneration of others (43 @)-, see monometalism 
a circumscription to equitable exchanges of product 
past with product after or to be in lifting usury and 
enhancement of the purchasing power of security or 
other stayed income (42) ; spoils of party success offi- 
cial prodigality and jobbery raid of industry; protected 
or free monopolies of manufacture merchandise labor 
transportation politics etc to impoverishment or stint 
of the direct and competitive producer : — all ragent 
now of lets of some and circumscriptions of others 
combinative a one grand concatenation of extortion 
clouded over to the masses in party insanity (11 A 
* &) and stupid self robbery raid of law or freedom 
— enthusiasm, quite proportional to daze and finesse 
of party leader (65) raid for revenue, spoil for place 
deception for avocation invasion for the weak *§, and 



<I "They (the Romans) give the name of Empire to rob- 
bery and slaughter"; they make a desert and call it peace. [Gal- 
gacus a leader of the ancient Brittons against the Romans: and 
ditto quite of the English versus India, and many of hers 
and others colonial adventures. See invasions of the Assyrians 

152 



free contract for the strong. See in ail this organized 
labor capitalism and officialism (the controllers of 
society now) going hand in hand to every legislative 
or let alone scheme of inordinate remuneration for 
themselves and friends, and concomitant liberal ex- 
penditure tributively depletive of others. Remedy, 
severe and criminal prohibition of all unjust combina- 
tions plots and bribery liftingly capitalistic official and 
other — of officialism, a fixing of hard boundaries 
against place hunting tax lifting borrowing and job- 
bery ineconomic to industry — of tax-lifting, note in- 
genuities of officialism legion to squeeze money out of 
people to increase or maintenance of inordinate sal- 
aries for themselves and friends, and multiplication or 
keep of places or jobs to plotters and pushers of spoil 
or opening. Official reform-, muchly a little scratch, 
a big noise, and a move up. [Lift raid robbery and 
spoil here, a taking of a something wholly or partly 
above a remuneration nil to any part. — 43 @.] 

38 Supply, is amount variety \and condition (36) 
of an any kind or kinds of wealth coordinate or product 
an any past present or future readiness of thing to 
other function or product the consequent. 

39 Demand, is vmnt and ability effectively or in- 
effectively appropriative of thing in self or others. 

m Effective demand, is availed opportunity, and 
ineffective demand, is awaiting opportunity lawful or 
unlawful. [Of demand exceeding or unmet of supply-, 



Medes Persians Romans Tartars Turks and others for immortal- 
ized men and legalized robberies and murders made great by 
literary gild, and false notions of kingly rights to rule. ["Free 
Contract" now (44) and Combination, a greatly relished substi- 
tute to much of this a negotiable finese or "genltmanly" honor 
cover of extorting selfishness within, and less jarring to pious 
weak or "cultured" nerves — 49 f] 

153 



the want and power conditional exist, but the supply 
of demand is not at hand. Opportunities singly voli- 
tional to wealth, a matter of individual or common 
ownership free to land and other means ; opportunities 
doubly volitional to wealth, a matter of want and 
ability meet of other want and ability in sensation 
information or remembrance concatenate. [22 **] 

PRODUCTIVE UNITS OF WEALTH AND 
MONOPOLY. 

40 Individual or collective individual abilities of 
coordination and product * equal or anywise greater 

* Note in this differences of men coordinate a some same 
doings of sort as sufficiency of means, preparedness quickness 
directness thoughtfulness and savingness of some to singular or 
conjunctive results and insufficiency of means unpreparedness 
dilitariness extraneousness thoughtlessness or wastefulness of 
others (11 B u) to immediate or connecting results same: also 
saving of costs and increase of efficiency in specialism — special- 
ism, a matter of natural gift and experience, or a severe ex- 
perience only. Of great gift special-, see degrade of such in 
popular shunt of it to other calling unkindred: — exampled of 
military talent often shunted to the political, and vice versa — See 
Sir Isace Newton in Parliament Revelation and the London Stock 
Market — his natural gift mathematics. In differing characters 
industrially combined to common object-, see founder of Com- 
munism within itself by the adept and willing greatly carrying 
the stupid and unwilling shirk parasitic of them — hence indus- 
trial effort individually circumscribed to lawful gain, the better 
method. [Cure for communism, a let of volunteer assisted and 
protected opportunities to an experience of the willing and effi- 
cient with the shystering dead beats of the noisy wild and often 
leading element ever ready for raid and never ready for work 
— (no unloading on others to be allowed in the experiment) : 
safeguard against Communism, a well distributed land holding 
yeomandry, estopped drunkenness, and a readily enforced equity 
in the distributions of industry; vice versa, an intensification of 
discontent among the menial, and an easy proselytism of them 
to any scheme proffering ease in industry, and a greater enjoy- 
ment of the goods of wealth — (beer especially) : — see spirit of 
socialism samely a rising menace raid of present industry as the 
northern enemies of Rome — namely an unsavingness covet of 
save in others — 43 @] 

154 



than a self-sustaining unit supply, is a Productive 
Unit of wealth. All of arrogative value, as 
coordinations of sort direct and concatenate of others 
to an any arrogative demands of wealth; equitable and 
inequitable efficient and inefficient economic and in- 
economic essential and inessential of function, as co- 
ordination and means effective a result same in any 
degree. [11 B u] 

Of productive units in wealth and their products 
of kind-, exampled in all ownerships (individual or 
collected) of land and supervision, to rent; organic 
and physical things coordinated in a unit of labor, to 
wages ; stock of trade or agency labor supervision and 
incidentals, to profits ; principal, to interest ; capitalized 
investments of manufacture transportation or preser- 
vation, to profits of investment; push or professional 
acquirements or both, and coordinations of a ques- 
tionable sort (65) and incidentals, to salaries fees etc. 

A Let U here stand for a productive unit of 
life and means individual or collective, and U an an- 
other productive unit of life same; and let* "^ j w 25* f 
represent Us economies and ineconomies efficiencies and 
inefficiencies (*) essentials and inessentials, equities and 
inequities instance or sum an any coordination (direct 
and through others), and values and no values of supply 
(sufficient insufficient or harmful) to function or pro- 
duct in kind (form and quality) quantity place and time 
normal lawful or perfect an any environment; and let 

. - J Q P L jj s economies ineconomies etc in kind 
e vik q p t) 

quantity place and time normal lawful or perfect an any 
environment of instance or sum; and let "^j, ^J rep- 
resent Us values and no values of product in kind quan- 
tity place and time normally lawfully or perfectly termi- 
nal or contigent to other function or product in wealth 
155 



same, and "?/| l. ? ? A represent Us values and no values 
of product in kind quantity place and time normally law- 
fully or perfectly terminate or contigent to other func- 
tion or product in wealth same: — then normal lawful or j 
perfect function and product instance or sum of U and 
U, are as values of their symbols in 

n i-vjkqpt! -vJkqptUwy 
US e vfkqpti' vlkqptP 9 "™ 



IT Si -v\kqp t\ -v\kqpt\ 
Ub \e v\k qp tv vikqptS 



I e v\k q p t\' vik qp t) 
b Then let variations actual of U and U in kind 
equal 3x 3x, 3a 3a, quantity 3y 3y 8b 3£> } place 8m ^m 3c 
8c, time 3n 3# 3d 3d: then function and products in- 
stance or sum of U and [/vary absolutely as values of sym- 
bols in Us i - v i k=i= Bx > ^ ^' P^ * m > tq= 5n i 
bols in. us e v -j k±: 3Xj q± 3yj p± gm5 t± Sn j- 

TTt5 -vJk=P «a, q=t= 8b, p+ 8 C , t+ *d! 
us vlk=b 8a, q± 8b, p± 3c, t± 8df^ 01 > 
j j 1 -vik^ 8"x, q+ 8y, pq= 3723, £=F %ni n -vj£h= 3a, 
us e vik± 3x, g± 8y, p± *m, t± SjjJ' us v(k± 3 a , 
<?=F 55, p q= a c , £+ a rfUroQ ,o 4y Q Y7 i 
<7± »fc, p=b a c , f± arfj Ldd X d4 x y Y Zj 

* Lines above and below, differeniate to each other. Read 
b* variable.. Read $ increased or decreased in value, and t the 
reverse in value — a differentiation of value with a minus or no 
value. [36. Minus value, a property of damage or destruction 
to that another in a function or product, and no value, a no 
potency simple to function or product — 1 «fl, 33 **, 36, 46 *<&] 

41 Monopoly in productive units of wealth, is 
an any holding against other demand (38) an any func- 
tion or product of sort a better or a worse do for an 
any all contingent function or product than another 
disposal of such prevent or potent an any greater to 
less essentiality economy efficiency or equity and value 
of product apart or whatever way combined. 
156 



That most practically best of all circumstances, is 
lawful monopoly and that not so an unlawful monop- 
oly. For monopoly of great earning wealth in kind 
(40, 41)-, see systematic accumulation suppress of the 
smaller many, and centralize of it into the hands of 
a few; and for monopoly of product to spoil of ex- 
change-, see a less or same for a same or more in 
value: — see great aggregations of producing wealth 
centralize of landed estate manufacture transporta- 
tion commerce politics and news — (first individual to 
gradual collection after) ; and for monopoly of prod- 
uct, in distribution (42)-, see fix of price salary fee 
tax revenue and wages; also lay in wait usury and 
other other extortion flay of want in pressure of need 
caprice convenience enticement deception enterprise 
indebtedness or other. [To hold against a general 
demand of a one time, is to flush another demand at 
another time.] 

DISTRIBUTIONS AND MORALS OF PRODUC- 
TION. 

42 Transfer of anything or things of wealth 
direct or concatenate an any number of intermediates 
in production to an any individual consumption fac- 
toral of wealth, is equitable or inequitable Distribu- 
tion of wealth : — all as transfer of an any past present 
or future products of wealth for other past present or 
prospective products balanced or unbalanced of ex- 
change, or transfer of lawful or unlawful take. 

B Of products of wealth total and incrementary 
of liquidated or accredited exchange-, let L:A repre- 
sent an average total of such enchanges of wealth 
normal of an any all time and place, and l:a their 
individual increments average; then let variations of 
such in an any all times or waves of distribution 
such in wealth for the totals, and 

for the increments: — then values of liquidated to 
accredited things of wealth in the any any all times 
or waves of variation to that the normal (the actual 
now of the any time) , will ratio in totals as 

and the increments as 
time to time, or crest to hollow of flush and depres- 
sion. [The values of balanced and unbalanced dis- 
tributions total, are differential when the amount of 
product distributed is same, and arithmetical when 

157 



the amount distributed is greater or less flfl[. In- 
crementary terms actual do not vary correspondingly 
with the totals,- but vary within them as differing 
abilities of actual coordination in the individuals to a 
total its terms of average only.] 



<|CI Unbalanced distributions of wealth, are as 
unbalances varying oppositely of undue excitations 
and lull of war or speculation in increased time pur- 
chases capitalized or consumed to war or speculation 
ended, and purchases by it limited of indebtednesses 
due and abilities shown — 47 x) : — of speculation often 
as great indebtednesses climaxing in stupendous booms 
the forerunner of corresponding panics; and of more 
gradual speculation-, as slowly climaxing to a more 
gradual depression of industry and its concomitant 
distribution. Of the last century-, variations of un- 
balanced distributions gradually becoming greater in 
permanent securities raid of prodigal officialism and 
agent influences onto born and unborn industry: — 
a condition of things now if much longer persisted in 
prognosticating dire calamity to national and other 
industry — the power to mortgage others a greatest of 
tyranny and danger. Then a generally continued and 
rising flush of production consumption labor and an 
excited unhoarding money at a one time by profits of 
speculation and increased indebtedness, unbalances ef- 
fective demand (38) of commodity consumption 
money (45) and employment at another time inverse 
of the flush and payment of abnormal credits in prin- 
cipals or products sacrificed in a limited circulating 
medium (45), and stoppage of prior excited demands 
of wealth to speculative profits gone, and consequent 
depletion of power both over other purchases of future 
wealth; or more slowly same of interests and costs of 
indebtedness carried and continued depletion of pur- 
chasing power future drawn out to any or all time — 
47. Increase of caring wealth and money circulation 
(45) without a differential increase of indebtedness 
or speculative profit lost in excited consumption, is 
not a disturber of production one time with another 
time — then a tempered (45) cash system of exchange 
and an absence of speculative profits lost in an in- 
creased consumption, is an evener of production one 

158 



time to another time normal of wealth, [z See here 
hoard of a circulating medium in fears of depositor 
to a banking system without security of deposit be- 
yond trust of honor in the banker — (an owe equal' 
nearly to have at best) : Also inactivity of a circu- 
lating medium on falling and losing prices,- versus 
activity of it in rising prices speculative— hence se- 
curity of deposits, or national banking and loan at a 
lowest rate lawful (43 ** z), an amend of fear, and 
an alleviation of interest to carry of distress abridge 
of depression in industry — 43 ** t.] 

43 Appropriation elimination grow gather make 
mend alter unfold (25) transfer (37) or preserve of 
thing most practicably unincroach an any lawfully 
acquired or acquiring ivealth in others, or amendingly 
encroach an any unlawfully acquired or acquiring 
wealth in others {opportunity) and of kinds of kind 
and quantity most practicably beneficial or harm- 
less $ to bodily or mental life direct and means in- 
direct, and most practically proportionate of cost and 
value, is Lawful Production,- or do and, have: vice 
versa, Unlawful Production,- or do and have. [33, 
7 *, 43 @] 

Then segregations of thing (1) to individuals of 
life productively best to lawful life and means in self 
(52 * &) and others, and most practicably equivalent 
in cost (35) and value (36), is a link or chain of 
moral action that confers a Lawful Title **: vice 
versa, an Unlawful Title — remedial in the hands of 
justice (enforcible right) when of a way less depletive 
to lawful wealth (52 *) than sufferance present and 
consequent. & Cost and value in essential wealth, a 
most practicable approach to a degree of economy 
and efficiency absolutely proportionate: — value short 
of this by inexperience inexpertness or wilfullness to 
be made up in quantity — units here a variable ratio of 
cost and value as economy and efficiency in coordina- 
tion varying one to the other in combination.] 



$ Selections beneficial to body and mind direct and in- 
direct, are necessarily the builders restorers and conservators of 
life: vice versa, selections useless or harmful. 

159 



** God's severing law of do and have flfl, and 
departing point to wrong,- individual or delegate — 
53, 54, [See this an indefinite sense of right nicely 
•slipped in the fundamentals to municipal or civil law 
(Blackstone II, [45]), disgorge of hoggishness in al- 
truism, and its easy overlook, or indifferent smother 
out in an agitating greed statute decision politics etc, 
and an insane worship of an importantly secluding or 
parading aristocracy or apeing officialism.] 

€1*1 To exist requires severed food everywhere, 
and segregate clothing shelter and fire most where — 
(segregate shelter or fire, a shifting to fixed share of 
place) : this requires the productive powers of land 
to that extent for the materials same to such,- and 
hence this a first capital and labor (46) right to a 
segregate real and personal property — first appropria- 
tion, an individual or sharing do and have severed 
from the common, and afterward a do and have (pos- 
session) shiftingly segregate from the common to the 
dividedly fastened. [Upon multiplication of individual 
units greater than natural products depleted or con- 
tinuing-, domsetication of animals (before taken wild) 
and pasturage increases segregative opportunity and 
product to an increased number of units; and agri- 
culture rambling at first to better methods later-, in- 
creases opportunity and product further concomitant 
colonization or emigration to unoccupied or less con- 
tested opportunities. The parent producing offspring 
produces with it the necessity of maintenance whole 
at first to graduate part second, and a transfer at 
death or sooner of the common or divided whole to 
them by duty dependence and preoccupancy or mingle 
of effort to its acquisition or maintenance — see Black- 
stones Rights of Thing, Chap. 1. In agriculture, lim- 
ited ownership of land to an interested care direct, 
begets a better care product and contentment than 
rental product quite shown of principal care at all, 
and a muchly less efficiency and contentment — other 
occupations secondary, are directly disrupted of the 
dependency on land, but indirectly subject alike to a 
better or worse condition of the primary effort their 
materials to secondary avocation. Most primitive 
rights (segregate do and have) then, are land and 
160 



their connected products wild to direct use, and sec- 
ondly those domesticated: other rights, a secondary 
to these indirect of land and other materials. Indi- 
vidual ownership and common ownership one to the 
other in right (segregate do and have or share) a 
matter of a best care use and contentment of the land 
and individuals in free and compulsory effort. Agri- 
culture then the foundation of all, should be carefully 
directed to a most economic and best balanced product 
practicable — (insufficient food and material to manu- 
facture, a curtailment of all) : — inducement to this 
end, an individual freedom to a greatest product and 
effort allowable in lawful wealth. [Willingness 
cheaper and better than coercion.] 

** Of kinds and amounts of coordinate wealth, 
and do now having place, and that should be out of 
place in lawful wealth, the following eliminations and 
substitutions of thing same, will point out principal 
ones and illustrate all other ones of our time : — All as 
an elimination of a shameful amount of capitalistic 
political and laboristic combinations in sort to indus- 
trial and officiaFdepletion and stint of other material 
production; annuitous or other gradual abolition of 



$ "Were this my last hour of power, it should be an hour 
sacred to revenge and pleasure — (opposing power now, and bar 
of opposition") ; "let new cares come with tomorrow's day. "To 
the young and wild nobles-, (gambler trust tribute now)"-, he 
held out the prospect of unpunished license, and uncon- 
trolled revelry; to the ambitious that of power, and to the 
covetous that of increased wealth and domain. The leaders 
of the mercenaries (tampered with voters now), received a 
donation — (an argument the most persuasive to their minds, 
and without which all others would have proved vain") ; and 
promises were still more liberally distributed than money" 
[Prince John in Ivanhoe and now greatly electoral powers that 
be — See Frenzied Finance and other in Everybody's Magazine 
1905-6] 

"But he to [Prince John], is but one of the tools with 
which I labor; and proud as he is-, should he presume to sep- 
arate his interest from mine this is a secret which he shall soon 

161 



all bonded indebtedness now in a good measure the 
means to war depletion of future industries, and met- 
ropolitan concentration of earning wealth differential 
of other provincial poverty at hand and approaching 
— (11 D z *) ; all the very essences of that by which 
the unscrupulous and fanatic take advantage of the 
ignorant and indiscreet in their any present enthusi- 
asms or other indiscreet wants indulged at sacrificed 
abilities of their own future or that of unborn gen- 
erations: elimination from all commerce or trade all 
adulterations of food that cheat the consumer, many 
things in whole, and all sham shoddy and falsehood 
(material intellectual and moral) of whatever kind 
and amount in wealth; elimination of all laws for the 
collection of debts above or below a lawful considera- 
tion — (a preventative much needed against raid of the 
weak by the strong in "free contract"— 44) ; their 
substitution by stringent laws for collection of debts 
essential to life (only) in tiding over unforeseen fail- 
ures of lawful sustenance, and that to self sustaining 
production — (a much needed remedy against prodigal 



learn". [Fitzurse in Ivanhoe, Parliamentary Lombard and 
Senatorial Wall Street] 

xxx "History repeats itself in regular circles: — this truth 
is well known among our principal men now engaged in forming 
an imperialism of capital to govern the world; while they are 
doing this-, the people must be kept in a condition of political 
antagonism: — the question of tariff reform must be urged 
through the organization known as the Democrat Party; and 
the question of Protection and Reciprocity must be forced to 
public view through the Republican Party — by thus dividing the 
voters-, we can get them to expend their energies in fighting 
each other over questions of no importance to us except as 
tethers to lead the common herd." [A Wall Street dispatch 
dated March 21, 1892. See Senatorial exposure and other Cos- 
mopolitan 1906] 

"Influence place fortune (all that human passions most 
covet) , are suspended and attached to the tree of liberty like 
prizes on a maypole: the people do not want urging to flock 
to it in crowds: go to the fair they must: and to get there 
everything must be overturned" [Matterneck. See all this ex- 
ampled in our corrupt and maddened conventions and campaigns 
of the day]. 

162 



and insolvent inefficiency and rascality) ; elimination 
of all persons irrespective of race sex riches or poverty 
to the right of voting franchise when in any way to 
venal receipts or expenditures of money or promises 
of kind to the elevation of a person to office, and the 
introduction of nomination strictly regulated by law; 
republican elimination or crowned amend of all im- 
portant executive offices of trust, and their substitu- 
tion or limitation by boards or councils elected to place 
and minor representations there as that of legislative 
bodies $$,- by a seven to more different persons from 
an undivided district to election — (all an any faction- 
ally single or double representation within a seven to 
more highest number of untampered with votes re- 
ceived) ; a substitution of all existing constitutions of 
government by carefully constructed and honestly 
conducted one term boards of review to let or circum- 
scription of legislature and executive acts more ap- 
proximately lawful to essential and equitable doing in 
wealth; elimination by law all false and misleading 
agitations of speech or publication intended to deceive 
or misinform people to unlawful gain or elevation or 
degradation of a person to office of pay or honor; 
elimination of all gambling schemes of stock grain 
etc, all considerations of contract above that received 
to gain (44) , and all combinations of capital or labor 
to enhance or hold of price or wages against other 
falling prices or wages unlawful in wealth; National 

$$ As by each or all factions eligible to representation 
(where there are no parties-, choice of persons can operate) 
having representation proportional to electors chosen — (one to 
more) : — then and not till such will all the people (quite) have 
laws without right of presence; and not as now a majority or 
plurality ruling a portion of the people by strategy of will, and 
another portion by force. Of minority power (sentinel or de- 
tective when otherwise ignored)-, it may be truly said "No man 
liveth to himself, and no man dieth to himself. [See perils of 
party strife in Washingtons Farewell Address, and the actual 
of it in our own time] 

163 



make and issue of silver certificates and coinage of 
gold and silver % proportional to general increase of 
products in wealth' z regulation of the rates of interest 
on an untaxed principal proportional to lawful profits 
of all lawful capital, and surety of all loans in a great- 
est practicable certainty of payment — (a taxed prin- 
cipal holding on the borrower a tax on property 
pledged, and another one local a loan center — 11 D y 
##<&); National or state criminal regulation of all 
incorporated and other monopolies in their rate of 
charges, watering of stock excessive number and pay- 
ment of officials and professionals of pay, and their 
protection from compulsory expenditures not plainly 
necessary, extortionate suits of damage, organized 
labor strikes, and malfeasance waste and inefficiencies 
of employees; elimination of all important official and 
legislative appointments, and their selection by a clean 
popular one term vote; regulation of official pay by 



t Certificates of silver in deposit-, having an intrinsic 
value worth of the silver (nearest possible a dollar's worth) to 
fiat of the note nill to difference its value in demand; while the 
note of all promise remains an all fiat instrument nill to its 
full face value in gold of demand. [Lieu to this,- an Interna- 
tional legal tender note and inteachangeable National notes on 
demand issued slowly with government banking insurance (pay) 
and economic transportation normal, would sooner to later pay 
off all national obligations, become an earning source of national 
income at all times, prove itself a one standard boon, rob no 
one, dissolve usury subsidy lobby etc, and lower interest and 
rates of transportation — policy of banking insurance and trans- 
portation now, of as little given possible to a greatest return 
possible, reversed to (salaries fees and jobbery now excepted) 
a greatest return possible for the least given possible. Govern- 
ment loans to be made on deposit of government bonds or a 
Torren's exhibit of title made safe in a lowly estimated evalua- 
tion, or other collective attestation Malefeasance in official do 
in these matters, to be safeguarded by civil security and felon- 
ious punishment]. 

164 



salary or feee most practically equivalent to value of 
services rendered; elimination from press school and 
rostrum all cheats of sort, and all corporative Jesuit- 
ical trade and other suppressions and falsifyings of 
that to true knowledge and right conduct— (see pull 
of these elements now in the city press — Appendix F) ; 
National or state criminal control of intoxicating 
drinks in kind quality and purity least injurious to 
man, and a time limitation of quantity and variety 
graduate a most practicable elimination of drunken- 
ness — (Appendix D) ; prohibition of marriage licenses 
to men or women of bad habits, or without reasonable 
means to the comfortable support and decent rearing 
of children; limited acquisition of real and personal 
property by purchase gift and inheritance essential 
to life, and prohibition of distant absentee ownership 
of land and capitalized investments in toto ; and lastly-, 
the development of an any existing system of official- 
ism in sort to that of an eligibility of service founded 
on a lawful property holding <§, a disposition to honor 
in lawful wealth, and a common sense knowledge of 
the lawful laws of wealth. 

<& A property holding fee simple of what a 
frugal honest citizen should acquire, would be a strong 
inducement to young men to save property (and par- 
ents to assist them) to the becoming a representative 
or executive freeman — (on the other hand limited to 
that gained by lawful gift inheritance or personal 
effort only) ; also a practicable elimination of a greater 
portion of all venal officials and others of unthrifty 
or vicious habits @ : — venality in vote (amounting 



@ Men who own property of any kind, pay their taxes, 
abstain from writing socialistic articles, and do not frequent 
barricades. [Bismarck in Bush. See this element here in the 

U. S. now coverting in labor unions and parades of sort ( 

G'-r of the bartenders union Grand Marshall of the day) to 
"less work," "more beer", and a still lingering seimsavage collec- 
tive desire to lift other peoples property. Socialism, mostly a 
cry of unthrifty and prodigal selfishness raid of saving others,- 
the conservators of all — were all men to become unsaving-, so- 
ciety would soon be a product of wild nature and desert fields — 
no "work", no "beer", and nothing to "lift". [For the root of 

165 



now in some places here to forty per cent) conse- 
quently eliminated, and corruption of officials ditto. 
Of late extension and failure of the suffrage negro 
and other, and another demand now sex being maa^ 
to the same, and all concomitant increased corruption 
in politics-, it may be said that a betterment of its 
quality, is a much more needed remedy: — reasonable 
success candor intelligence and honor in one's avoca- 
tion, is a much better test of a good elector or official 
than that of unthrifty coordination ignorance preju- 
dice and unscrupulousness apart or whatever way 
combined. 



this spirit-, see the Ancient Germans Gauls and others wastes 
of Rome, and decentralized Greece Europe England Ireland 
Scotland and other. Suppressing now in strongly centralizing 
powers protective against it, and estopping greatly in new 
colonial possessions lately a one wide field of tribalized cattle 
and slave lifting power decentralized: and for its newer forms 
and spirit a centralization of ruling power secretive-, see col- 
lective lift of others delusively tributive a cunningly and un- 
scrupulously arranged system of extortions for revenue and 
profits for capital at home, and a Congo centralized revenue 
deceit and extortion now lift of native rubber: also others 
otherwise colonial. And for this spirit individual-, see property 
misdemeanors felonious and jump of accounts. Lifting then, 
a forcable stealthy deceptive or delusive take whole part or per 
cent an anothers property or opportunity (47) without remun- 
eration,- a something materially or immaterially (37) a fact 
past present or to be, and suitably equivalent — not a nonentity. 
[& Of secondary industry and great capital, see opportunities 
to earn greatly increased over agriculture and home manufac- 
ture, and its counterpart the intellectual emotional or volitional 
inability of the unthrifty and prodigal to save and coordinate 
capital outside of wage labor — (44*) : — consumption all or more 
than earn, investment none or little. Hence save a necessity to 
this a secondary opportunity to labor,- and uncapitalizing labor 
not an appropriator of that to its own opportunity: — capital 
here first, labor second, and neither productive without the 
other — hence a disturb of one a disturb of the other. Primitive 
capital, a body food hands, pointed stick, rubbed stone or bone 
chip, and his own changing or located wild about him]. 

166 



CONTRACT AND SALE. 

44 Specified and unspecified agreement between 
owners of wealth for things of ivealth in any past 
present or future supply for other past present or 
future supply, is contract, and that of kind and qual- 
ity unspecified, and most practicably equivalent in 
value and essential to life is implied contract *. 

45 Transfer of things of ivealth through a me- 
dium of exchange, is Sale. 

Price of the any all individual increments of sale 
in any total demand, depends upon amount of medium 
circulating in the any effective demand (39), number 
of repeated and single transfers through the same, 
and quantity of the things past present and future 
transferred through the medium, for the any time of 
exchanges estimated *. [Hence a dollar (whole, or 
part at a time) doing an average business of itself 
once a day, will do three hundred and sixty-five dollars' 
worth of business beside change in a year: — its activ- 
ity greater and less of flush and depression of industry 
—47.] 



* Implied contract producing natural obligation, and ex- 
press contract producing artificial obligation •! — and lawful and 
unlawful as coincidence and incoincidence with essentiality of 
kind and equivalence of value. 

€J "In vain they reason finer webs shall draw — (43*) ; 
entangle justice in her net of law". [See Express and Implied 
Contracts law of reigning jurisprudence]. 

* At the close and for a short time after the war of Re- 
bellion (1865-7)-, the total amount of circulating medium here 
was probably between twelve and eighteen hundred millions of 
dollars; now from the Treasurer's Report and other estimates 
there are about $1,600,000,000 minus unaccounted for gold silver 
paper currency and Treasury Reserve of several hundred mil- 
lions (1894) : — at least to be fair minded between those anxious 
to go to either extreme-, it may be safely said that there is little 

167 



C Of an any total transfer of things (past pres- 
ent and future) through a medium of exchange normal 
in amount, let P— total products (cordinate and other), 
and M total medium active of that demand, and u 
number of the transfers instance and repeated through 
the medium same and let ?:>=average of the any all 
individual increments of sale through the medium 
same, and m^their average prices in transfer: — then 
total and increments normally balance of exchange in 
product and price as value of the symbols inPequivMX n 
and pequivm.Then to terms of average (sum of sales 
divided by number of sales), let variation in P s terms 
= %x and M s terms ^y #z, p s terms ^a and m s 
terms %b : — then actual variation of product and price 
total and instance, ratio as value of symbols in (P± 
%x) greater or less than (M=t %y X n± s z); and 
(pit %a) greater or less than (m± s b). [Product and 
price total and individual do not vary correspondingly 
in either product or price: — as by variation of indi- 
vidual abilities actual in coordination of a product 
through a medium of exchange, and an invariable 
variation of individual supplies (in time and place) 
concatenate of transfer through the medium — incre- 
ments thus making up the totals of thing and price. 
Individual things through the medium symbol actually 
as values of (p± ^a) equiv(m± %b) greater or less in 
value than (p± 3fc) same equiv (p± s a) not a same but 
another product sequent.] 



if more money now (1894) in actual circulation here than in the 
year 1867. Since that time our essential and other products 
have at least increased from one and one-half to three times 
their amount at that time,- say nothing about new kinds of 
products that have come into existence since, and that keep a 
good portion of the medium in their exchanges — as stock grain 
and other gambling etc. 

168 



x Then prices instance of any products of wealth 
depend upon a greater or less amount of the medium 
free in the demand of the time and place, rapidity of 
circulation, and increase or decrease of products pass- 
ing through the medium of the time. Restrictions of 
money to essential wealth, consists of the any govern- 
mental restrictions of its general volume,- by decrease 
of amount or retentions of its volume against general 
increase of essential and non-essential products in an 
increasing industry or territorial expansion; moneys 
excessively in treasury vaults of all taxations ^, re- 
serves of bank, and private hoardings: amount of 
money arrested from essential wealth in stock grain 
and other gambling and other nefarious schemes of 
cunning; amount of money gone out of a nation or 
essential products above receipts same of other source ; 
extravagant expenditures of display travel etc, unre- 
munerative gifts political funds, jobbery and other 
unremunerative or evil purposes nonessential or harm- 
ful to life ; all treasury notes and bank notes destroyed 
of accident or wilfulness; all gold and silver coin 
leaving a country and never returning; all coins and 
bullion used as money melted into gewgaws of art, 
or lost of all accidents; all moneys circulating in 
worthless patent medicines, deceitful professionalisms 
and other deceitful articles of commerce; moneys cir- 
culating in infinite crimes idleness sports, excessive 
salaries, fees etc; money in extravagant expenditures 
of official palaces livery upholstery toilet etc. [All 
financial legislation should assume money only a me- 
dium of exchange, and not a tool of usury and se- 
curity purchasing power, as that disguised in most 
legislation of the past. An honest dollar consists of 
a normal purchasing power of money quantitively in- 
creased or decreased in amount and activity as normal 



^ Amounting of recent years in the U. S. to a good por- 
tion of $1,300,000,000: — the whole tax here national down 
amounting quite likely to more than our whole medium of ex- 
change in actual use (not "outstanding") once every year 
passed through the tax-gatherer's hands, and arrested so long 
from circulation in other exchanges. 

169 



increase or decrease of products passing through the 
medium: — hence interested selfishness of the creditor 
in restriction of the quantity of money in circulation 
direct of no make, and indirect of reserve or hoard — 
(see Resumption Acts, Revolution and Rebellion) ; 
and vice versa of the exploiting debtor. Intrinsic value 
of money, is the worth that would be placed upon it 
demonetized and used in the arts only: the fiat value 
of money is the value of it monetized above that it 
would be worth demonetized — hence gold and silver 
intrinsically would be worth gold and silver in the 
arts, divided by all gold and silver approximately; 
and flatly worth gold and silver money divided by all 
gold and silver approximately]. 



CAPITAL AND LABOR. 

46 Things of wealth coordinated to other pro- 
duction in wealth, is capital; and coordinations of a 
unit of life to other production of wealth, is labor: — 
all two indissoluble factors' of production in wealth 
varying to each other in kind quantity place and time 
as changes of kind quantity place and time apart or 
whatever way combined *. 

* All special and miscellaneous conditions of 
body and mind (25) coordinately potential 1& to atten- 
tion apprehension motive volition locomotion prehen- 
sion and other do apart or whatever way combined to 
production, are capital; and all specialized and other 
functions of body and mind in apprehension volition 
attention or muscularity apart or whatever way com- 
bined, are labor : also all conditions of animal vegetable 
or physical things coordinated to production of what- 
ever kind or kinds of wealth, are capital, and their 
functions, production. [33. Capital a potential, and 
production (labor and other) the use of that poten- 
tial to a product material or immaterial,- and potential 
or unpotential to other production in wealth. & See 



€J Potentiality here, a condition of body and mind formed 
of example drill habit teach caprice genius or information bene- 
ficial useless or harmful to self or others. [43, 32 x, 25, 652:, 
S nn z]. 

170 



depletions of potential here whole of transportation 
distribution preservation recreation idleness crime in- 
surance gambling intoxication sport professionalism 
officialism and journalism, and a variable restore of 
it in new appropriation make grow and mend as econ- 
omy efficiency and plentitude to scarcity of thing 
earthly in direct production — (41 A) : — hence all life 
rests fundamentally on the economy and efficiency of 
those to appropriation grow make and mend from 
earthly accumulations past now fastly depleting, and 
reproductions anew now greatly of elementary deple- 
tions to reproduction. See arrogate wealth now ple- 
thoric of earthly collections past, and greatly deple- 
tory of future generations,- now unrepresented in the 
doings of the present generation: also mortgages of 
jobbery now put onto born and unborn industry help- 
less to technicalities of free contract (44),- a spoil 
of them above a few nearly worn out benefits reach- 
ing them thereby]. 

a Products of any kind or kinds of productive 
wealth (capital and function), increased or decreased 
of general demand to a some other kind or kinds of 
productive wealth varied or not, varies the quantity 
or price or quantity and price of the one to the other 
accordingly. [7 M & &] 

b Evchange of the products of any kind or kinds 
of productive wealth for products of other kind or 
kinds of productive wealth, and that of the one are by 
supervision mechanic out or natural change produced 
at a lower cost to consumer, and concomitant a lesser 
demand for the products of a some other kind or kinds 
of productive wealth, equipoises or tends to an equi- 
poise of their relations in demand <J. 



<$ Hence the claims of German and other social demo- 
crats that steam and machinery in general is a benefit only to 
the capitalistic classes, is in error to a good extent,- in that a 
same amount of labor will now buy more machine goods, or a 
less amount of labor a same amount than that of yore substi- 
tuted — the later at worst easing him of much drudgery, and 
giving him more time for political enthusiasm (a demagogic 
welling up of the feeling of a sovereignty importance within), 

171 



c Exchange of the any products of kind or kinds 
of wealth increased of intensity in general demand 
without increase of quantity proportional (wilful or 
unwilful), and with little or no variation in demand 
for products of a some other kind or kinds of wealth, 
increases costs of the products of one to the other 
proportionately : and exchange of the products of any 
kind or kinds of wealth decreased in demand by other 
products of kind or kinds, decreases their opportuni- 
ties (calls of capital and labor) to reproduction or 
prices, or opportunities and prices proportional to the 
decreased demand. 

d Increase in number or substitution of labor 
units in wealth in kind or kinds with some to no de- 
crease in demand for labor (as by increase of birth 
immigration change of occupation or by machinery 



@ and suffrage a safety valve against barricade. [To work for 
a common fund, is to destroy greatly the energy of endeavor; 
vice versa a limited individualism and selfishness of the strong 
restricted: — sovereignty of a whatever form intimated of suff- 
rage etc, really resting within those forming or shaping opinion 
through speech and the press subsidized promised or owned by 
the real rulers monarchial democratic liberalistic capitalistic or 
socialistic respectively part or whole of rule — suffrage sovereign- 
ty, a delusion farther than sentimental brake to change, or ma- 
jority momentum passive to change or conservation, 

@ A voice in Congress: — "I quarrel not with others; but 
my only choice in this matter is clear — it is the course I have 
followed, and please God will follow until I die,- that the voice 
of the people (index finger quivering aloft), is the voice of 
God" — 11 e €|. Akin to this in motive-, see "Dignity of Labor" 
flattery in an eye to patronage or popularity, allay of menial 
discontent, or pull of the ballot — see effects of this an imaginary 
deference (false in fact) welling up in the enthusiasms of Labor 
Day ado even of election. See also enthusiasms of a false de- 
ference flatter of crowd military political or other — crowd here 
the menial end of the whole pretense, and deferential nourish- 
er of the motives to flattery — terms to all this, undeserved favor, 
and a sacrificing meniality. Of theme or person, see power of 
iterate say and fuss popularize of such within the masses ancient 
and modern]. 

172 



substitutive apart or whatever way combined), de- 
creases average share of labors products in demand 
as increased number of the divisor to supply decreased 
or not of substitution or other cause in the demand : — 
as differentiating to their respective units above and 
below the average as opportunities used to refused, 
and energies and efficiencies of the individual units 
(terms of average) composing the increased divisor 
of total supply. [7 m & &, 45 C] @ @ 

e And lastly: general increase of population to 
subsistence of any time and place or secondary supply 
in wealth within any collective demand, or relative de- 
crease of supply (real or held) decreases the average 
share of supply to each individual proportional to in- 
creased population or decreased supply: — all as dif- 
ferentiating to the terms of average above and below 
the normal as personal coordination and opportunities 
used to production of the any time and place, and val- 
ues of cooperative or noncooperative supply entering 
their respective demands — individual abilities and en- 
ergies (rightful or wrongful), direct of their own im- 
mediate coordinations of kind with others class to 
favors of honest or trickery legislation or combina- 
tion : individual inabilities, direct of their own inecon- 
omies inefficiencies or lack of energy to function di- 
rectly, and mediate of their own inabilities to favored 
legislation or combination indirectly. [See successful 
and unsuccessful legislation and organization to this 
effect the last twenty-five years. See Capital and La- 
bor by J. S. Mill]. 

@ @ Of labor opportunity and product here-, 
see earnings of great capital per their unit powers 
(40) substitutive of labor earn drawn to them in 
general demand for their commodities: — hence a re- 
version of this now to labor as afore-, would be an 
increase of each labors share and an increase of em- 
ployment proportional to number of labor units then 
and the owners and sharers of this capital pushed in 
with them,- from idleness and sport a no producer of 
potential (but a depleter of it) now made a differ- 
ential — 33 * *. To this total of wealth now actual of 
previous arrogation unlawful-, a division of it lawful 
would be the opportunity of its division by an ability 
highest of lawful effort to that lowest in unthrifty 

173 



coordination (40 *),- and not a division equal of na- 
tionalism or communism,- a premium on unthriftiness 
and dead-beat parasitism prey of others — 40 *, 48 b, 
49 # &, a z. Lawful effort in a highest ability ex- 
hausting exterior opportunities unavailed in other 
lawful appropriation, continues its greater efforts of 
production within that already appropriated by an in- 
tensity of production to or not to an exhaust of all 
lawful effort within bounds exterior and interior his 
environment — hence of greater effort to agriculture-, 
limitation of acreage would balance up to limits in an 
intenser cultivation of that already possessed. Of 
time labor-, remuneration, should be proportional to ef- 
fort and efficiency within bounds of opportunity not 
aggressive of others fulfilled opportunities lawful]. 

47 By preceding laws of wealth in kind to kind 
distributed of a varying medium and product past 
present and future (37, 44, 42, 45, 42 <f q z)-, it fol- 
lows that individual and collective individual success 
and failure in wealth, depends upon individual, or col- 
lective individual abilities energies and opportunities 
(direct and legislative) used to refused of time and 
place to a greater or less congenial or uncongenial 
environment of regulated or unregulated opposition 
and product — (free of competition, limited of com- 
bination) : and of product to product of exchange in 
fixed sequence, are as kind to kind varying in cost and 
value as cost and value of thing when an obligation 
artificial (44) is made to cost and value when an 
obligation same is paid. 

xln an estimate of cost and value of things in 
wealth sequent of contract and fixed prices made in 
times of flushed industry speculation or combination 
by obligations of "Free Contract" and exorbitant sal- 
aries commissions taxes duties professional charges 
and other prices of thing put enhanced or conserved 
through a medium of exchange mostly (45)-, let 
price and amount of an any given kind or 
kinds of wealth at a time of flushed industry specula- 
tion or combination usually concomitant ; and the same 
products decreased in price z times equal price of the 
same kind or kinds of wealth at a time of depressed 
industry or speculation : — then obligations of free con- 

174 



tract, and unchanged fees salaries taxes etc paid in 
fixed sequence, ratio in purchasing power of money- 
over the kind or kinds of wealth as values of ( ) 
past equivalent to ( ) future; or as 
— all as quantities of like kind or or kinds,- of wealth 
given and taken in fixed sequence z times greater and 
less, and abilities to pay obligation z times less plus 
or minus difference of cost in production later with 
production former; vice versa, the contrary. [Cost 
and price never coextensive — 35. For actual exam- 
ples of the above (greatly through financial legisla- 
tion since 1868-, instance purchasing power of our 
national obligations fixed of an active money (45) 
inflation by our war of 1861-5 in average prices then 
paid for the necessaries of life in beef wool flour cot- 
ton and sugar (six equal divisions of our debt thus, 
and then obligated of about two and three quarter 
billions of dollars), was equal to about ten million 
barrels of beef (300 lbs each), four million sacks of 
wool (200 lbs per sack), fifty five million barrels of 
flour, fifteen million tons of corn, two and one third 
million bales of cotton (500 lbs), and twenty eight 
million sacks of sugar — (100 lbs) : and today (1894) 
after payment as principal and interest an amount 
over four billion dollars-, the debt as it now stands 
(a little over one billion dollars) would of its obliga- 
tions buy now of the same commodities in above order 
(compare the italics) sixteen million barrels of beef, 
seven million sacks of wool, forty five million barrels 
of flour, thirteen million tons of corn, four and three 
fourth million bales of cotton, and thirty nine million 
sacks of sugar. Quite all other products have varied 
about the same ratios then to now: — therefore our 
debt obligations of today (1894) have a greater pur- 
chasing power over commodities of wealth than the 
time it was quite treble the amount in dollars. Again 
by prices of many of our products in an active cir- 
culating money increased in volume (45) about the 
end of the Rebellion (1865-7), and their prices now 
in a slow movement of money and restricted amount 

175 



of hoard and resumption-, the Presidents salary today 
($50,000) has a purchasing power five times greater 
than the President's salary (Lincoln) of that time-, 
and equivalent to a salary then of $125,000; a sen- 
ator's salary now ($8,000) has a purchasing power 
equivalent to a salary then of twenty thousand dol- 
lars,- or that four times greater than a senator's pay 
of 1865-7 (then $5,000) : and all old government bonds 
today have now a purchasing power two and one half 
times greater at least than that at the termination 
of the war; and all English consols and other old 
European securities have now a purchasing power 
considerably greater than at the close of the war — 
hence Bond Holder's money, and salaried and other 
fixed interests of sort in our halls of Congress, and 
ours and others financial legislation (Hamiltonian 
here) since that time — "monometalism." See Sher- 
man Resumption Act, and Demonetization of Silver 
in the American Congress, and general bankruptcy 
and industrial demoralization outside — muchly a 
Judaic fry of Protestant fat. 

Then abnormal production of certain kinds of 
wealth in an abnormally increased demand of what- 
ever cause and extent, and concomitant great pur- 
chases of speculative and consumed things against 
future abilities of obligation, results sooner or later 
in a great discrepancy of kind to kind in the sequent 
demands of wealth; and that of a reverse demand 
(sometimes a panic) there suddenly or more slowly 
comes about a failure of demand for certain many 
kinds of wealth and stoppage of reproduction and em- 
ployment; a holding price * of many kinds, limited 



* Limitation here, direct of a decreased amount purchased 
in held or enhanced commodity, or that of others ousted by 
patron ability to others absorbed in purchase of a like amount. 
[Aside of most staple things-, greatly a raid of om to an other 
direct and others indirect. See of put and hold here thousands 
of things little in themselves but huge in their sums priced and 
sold in shrewdness of the seller to carelessness of the buyer in 
profits of a stunning per cent, that otherwise would greatly in- 
crease the differing purchases of other goods and opportunities 
of capital and labor to reproduction thus shorn of rights in 

176 



sale, decreased reproduction and stoppage of employ- 
ment; and a falling price (staples usually) of many 
kinds and continued reproduction and employment: — 
a condition of things then continuing as continued fail- 
ure of kinds to find a demand, and times of other lim- 
itations preferred to other kinds sacrificed by perish- 
ability of their natures, need and enforced sales to 
payment of obligations prioriy made and abnormally 
increased in power over products of wealth. [Dem- 
onstration here, differential or arithmetic variation of 
terms divided into their sums]. 

GOVERNMENT COMBINATION AND INDIVID- 
UALISM. 

48 Government, is capitalistic and laboristic 
superintendency of function (cause) and product 
(effect) within an any number of units in wealth 
national to individual. 

All that of an any number of superintendencies 
of kind with their powers of supervision (political 
religious industrial or other) derived from their any 
higher to lower abilities of coordination (46 *) supra, 
and coordinative wills of subject members affirming 
or abiding control. [Essential and nonessential, and 
equitable and inequitable, as essential and nonessen- 
tial and rightful and wrongful supervision and abid- 
ence (34 x) immediate of directive function or medi- 
ate of protective function : — as protection or let alone 



lawful demand: See also other extortions thus muchly funeral 
fashion decoration etc under pressures of distress pride taste 
etc a raid of them and their other rightful demands estopped 
in themselves and others. See all extortions combinate or indi- 
vidual, a raid of others directly or indirectly lawful or below 
the lawful in their prices, and an approximate balance up with 
each other. Extortions of enterprise greatly profitable, an invi- 
tation of others into a same field divide of its earnings and hold 
of its extortions: — see much merchandise manufacture transpor- 
tation professionalism and officialism in this condition now — 
remedy, regulated diminution, and restriction of price rate fee 
and salary lawful, and disallow of them below. [16 a @@<fe]. 

177 



* of the essential or nonessential or equitable or in- 
equitable members of society against rights or wrongs 
of others. Motives to supervision, lawful or unlaw- 
ful gain or beneficence apart or whatever way com- 
bined «I. 

b Things of wealth appropriated in kind or 
through a medium of exchange out of private earn- 
ings, is tax: — essential and inessential and equitable 
and inequitable when corresponding with essential 
inessential and equitable and inequitable do and pay 
of a system of officials assistants contractors etc in- 
discriminately dutiful of control over a system indis- 
criminate of essential and nonessential and equitable 
and inequitable productions of wealth: essential and 
equitable when of a system of officials assistants etc 
dutiful an essential and equitable control (yet a good 
ways in the future) of the essential things of wealth 
only. [34 x. Hence error of Benthems "greatest good 
to a greatest number"-, in that right and protection 
belongs to each individual proportional to their ener- 
gies of effort, and degree of efficiency high to low in 
lawful wealth — 46 @ @. See further Ely's French 
and German Socialism, and The State versus the Man 
Contemporary Review for April, 1885. Of all social 
writers-, the communists in theory (theorized angel- 
ism, impractical manism), come nearest equality 



* Witness inabilities of many to deceptions of let alone 
trade by print word of mouth or constant changes of the ap- 
pearances or places of thing varnished wilt deceit, or labeled 
with seducing falsehood 

tj Extremes in industry, are unlawful combination (cap- 
italistic or labor) one extreme, and unorganized industry the 
other extreme: of plan in government-, autocratic centralization, 
is one extreme, and democracy, the other: — extremes, abormal; 
the middle, normal — the normal more approximately lawful 
(43) than either the extremes. [Hence of the rise of parties 
in the United States; referencial reliance on a popular vote-, 
Jefferson thought a best method of eliciting wisdom and justice 
in government — (capitalistic and laboristic control) : virtual 
aggrandizement of popular government into the hands of the 

178 



(consumption at least) $, but by crippling incentive 
miss equity about as bad as the other extreme. Lim- 
ited indebtedness to things necessary to life and self 
sustaining production, limited bequest and inheritance 
now absent of personal freedom in favor of the intel- 
lectually strong in avocation, and overthrow of the 
power to mortgage others and official and capitalistic 
extravagance present our much paraded and deceit- 
ful nineteenth century civilization, is a far more prac- 
ticable scheme of reform — political mend a much 
easier way of change than the upturning of all society 
and building it upon an imaginary plan ideal and 
against undeveloped human nature — change funda- 
mental comes of a gradual development only. Present 
state of policies and most religion, is but a salary fee 
and profit-grabbing selfishness, calculating flattery, 
political sophistry, moral delusion, and party insanity 
sovereign power of the land : — their leaders, cunning 
and deluded wolves in sheep's clothing; their follow- 

elite-, Hamilton thought the only means of governing a people 
wisely and justly — (a piece of criminal selfishness) : — the for- 
mer method, a failure in that wisdom nor justice in government 
capitalistic or laboristic can be formulated out of popular delus- 
ion ignorance indifference and capitalistic inability (43 @ &) 
slave to parasitic intelligence — (see this all faith same now in 
an anti-imperialism over semisavagry) ; the later a failure,- in 
that such cannot be formulated out of elite hoggishness and 
rabid conceit, arbitrariness and deceit manipultory of sentiment 
law and suffrage — same of oligarchy or autocracy independent 
of popular vote, and directory of inherited and introduced senti- 
ment or compulsion pamper of nobility and other aristocratic 
conceit. [In the policies of monarchial or elite control-, see 
flatteries of attention or aid to the indigent and lowly feared 
of ballot mobviolence or barricade — and greatly unworthy ob- 
jects of either attention or charity — easily exposed of an item- 
ized account of their habits of every day doing — 55 t]. 

% "What is a communist: — one who hath yearnings for 
equal division of unequal earnings; idler bungler or both, he is 
willing to fork out his penny and pocket your shilling." 

"What is "a Capitalist: — "one who hath yearnings for 
"freegrab "division of" ev'rbody's earnings": Gentleman cheat" 
or both, he is willing to fork out his penny and pocket your 
shilling." 

179 



ers, deluded men mostly of good intention, but dan- 
gerous elements in a political momentum of corrupt 
leadership — 65. Deluded leaders, but blind guides of 
a remunerative insanity leading blind followers of a 
succoring insanity. Kemunerative delusion, greatly 
well paid interests and dainty efforts of sort veiled in 
political and religious assumptions of sort credulously 
doctrinal, unquestioning deference and succor of sort 
insanely lay, impressive ceremony and speech of sort 
authoritatively interested, approving applause and 
swarmery of sort fawningly crowd, and a maddening 
conceit of all a grand delusion — 37 & and Preliminary. 
Much politics priestcraft and professionalism, a pri- 
vate business and a public pretence]. 

49 Combination, is an any association of indi- 
vidual units of life to an any do clique of each others 
wants or don't wants of sort protective extortive 
recreative industrial peopleistic political Jesuitical fra- 
ternal guild, or other. 

Of clique greatly do as best you can with others-, 
all as greatly an inequitable assistance political relig- 
ious industrial etc resting upon an intelligence and 
disposition of mind greatly indiscriminate of essen- 
tiality and nonessentiality equity and inequity in 
wealth favorable to them and unfavorable to others: 
of lawful clique amend of this-, all an enfolding of 
sense disposition of mind and association same to a 
volunteer and coersive essentiality and equity of im- 
plied obligations (44) in formative production, trade, 
official duty, public expenditure, and the leisures of 
life. [Lawful development in industrial reciprocity, 
the any wise and just resolutions and restrictions vol- 
unteer and coersive of present wants of contract to 
essentials of life and future abilities of pay; the pre- 
vention of all deceptive or extorting combinations of 
officialism professionalism capital and labor to pro- 
duction in wealth, and a greater to less regulated dif- 
fusion and specialization of make grow and merchan- 
dise; enactment of laws preventing nonessential and 
exorbitant expenditures of wealth of many kinds and 

180 



amount; enactment of laws preventing nonessential 
and inequitable products of kind in toto * or part en- 
tering lawful demands of wealth; the enactment of 
laws preventing time speculations without lawful use 
of the wealth concomitant; enactment of laws pro- 
hibiting prices of thing purchase, fees salaries pro- 
fessional charges etc above lawful values of commod- 
ity or service returned (43), and all means of enforc- 
ing specific contracts in whole or part morally wrong 
and avoidable of practice J ; and best of all-, the vol- 
untary practice of essentiality and equity in industry 
and other duties of life. [All expressions of good-will 
esteem accommodation etc included,- and of no unim- 
portant value to convenience good-will well doing and 
being in society — note convenience to answers of in- 
quiry in this and stop to think in such the inconveni- 
ence or impossibilities of do in bar of all answer — #. 

J For examples of specific contracts clique of 
official malfeasance and jobbery concomitant of little 
or no return to essential wealth-, the reader may call 
to mind many collusions of legislative and municipal 
grants and rights given away, and bonded indebted- 
ness incurred national to municipal in organization; 
public moneys squandered in nonessential and inequi- 
table improvements of little or no return to wealth; 
unlawful multiplication of places for pet swarms of 



* Instance an almost infinite number of patent and drug 
medicines prescriptions calls and powwows of indemonstration 
that probably in unity nine cases of a hundred, are totally inef- 
ficient of their purported or assumed ends,- namely elixirs to 
health, and cures of disease: also excessive and extravagant of- 
ficialisms and professionalisms of sort leaches on society. 



# See of this a recluse in confucius time (a class of men 
ignoring the dependencies of social life on principle) refusing 
to inform him of the whereabouts of a ford he was hunting. 

"How long is it since a post chaise went through here, in- 
quired Mr. Wardle". 

"How long? Why I don't rightly know — it worn't a long 
time ago, nor a short time ago — just between the two perhaps". 
[Picwick Papers.] 

181 



hungry office seekers and professional parasites of 
little or no return of benefits to wealth: construction 
of official palaces upholstery livery toilet, ordinances 
of war, and other destructive implements of prodigal 
peace and wicked war. [Of war-, instance that of our 
modern wars, and present armed and arming peace of 
Europe: collusions of sort advantage of national hate 
deceptions to the rights of industry, crazed philan- 
thropy, and pretended good of others to schemes of 
aggrandizement and cunning: modern bonded indebt- 
ednesses of kind, jobbery and emotional statesman- 
ship to harmful wars of the strong and shameful rob- 
beries of the weak in the name of "Liberty" "Right" 
"Prestige" "Trade and sacredness and finesse of obli- 
gations incurred by spendthrift rulers, and squandered 
in ambition vengeance plunder and wreck of weaker 
nations: — their fruits now enormous officialisms of 
waste riveted onto the burdens of industry; immense 
armies and ordinances of menace cantoned out on the 
frontiers of spoil vengeance danger and discontented 
servitude; and eternal indentures of oppression plas- 
tered onto born and unborn industry. [See history of 
the East India Company, Taine's Ancient Regime, and 
our own war with Mexico,- a slave holder's raid for 
slave territory. & In contests of encroaching govern- 
ments strong and strong or strong and weak-, the one 
that can give a better use and a greater security of 
person and property, is to be preferred — so of invad- 
ing influences mental]. @ 



@ See in this Englands severe reclamation of old Irish 
Clanism and cattle lifting to a better use and respect of person 
and property: also dearly paid for Egypt now ten millions, and 
recently six millions of people: see also a French decent on 
Morocco (1907) a much needed remedy for Mohametan and 
oriental savagry, and an uncivilized industry of three thousand 
years since: also conquests of semisavage and semicivilized 
people in collonial government: the United States versus Cuba 
and the Philippines, the English in South Africa, and the Ger- 
mans also — (an improvement of the political moral and indus- 
trial conditions of the originals there, and a making room for 
European immigrants a leaven of all that better,- in spite of 

182 



50 Individualism, is the any modes or freaks 
of conduct to self or other thing. 

Of behavior-, all as essential and inessential and 
equitable and inequitable doing or not doing of some- 
thing relating to wants or don't wants of self or other 
animate thing — (see cruelty to dumb service, or kindly 
care) : — humanity lawful of all doing and not doing 
of things to self or others most practicably essential 
in kind and equivalent in value; vice versa, unlawful 
doing or not doing. [See organic injury of the body 
by intoxication, high living, vile medicine etc, and evils 
of bad influence 11 e <I ]. 

x Motives to behavior ly in our considerations 
motor or restrain of gain punishment revenge ostra- 
cism sympathy good or ill will of others esteem duty 
aversion and all other considerations of sort respecting 
self or others. For motives in conduct free of others-, 
see all motives to do or not do of every day avocation 
and unemployed time to do and have free of others. 
Considerations recipiently and prevailingly or unpre- 
vailingly motor or restrain a some doing or not doing 
reciprocately right or wrong (43) to self or others, is 
the moral sense of men to right or wrong behavior 
* : & motives successfully or unsuccessfully- motor 



their defects and bad examples at home. [z. Then forcible or 
influencial invasion of an unjust system of rule and gain of 
sort by another encroaching system of rule and gain of sort 
carrying lawful reform, justifies the invasion: vice versa, the 
contrary. Of influential insinuations clique to rule and gain by 
influences greatly unremunerate of others-, see clerical inge- 
nuity and success Roman Catholic and other,- to soft efforts 
clerical, and choice comforts earthy quite unremunerate an ador- 
ing trusting succoring and unprofiting laity: — remuneration 
itself, not a nonentity of sort, but a material or immaterial 
something a fact — hence the enjoyments and consolations of a 
belief f aisle*, are so far a quasi remuneration part of the whole 
pretention — He ##]. 

* Gentlemanly or ladylike behavior to others, of a sincer- 
ity of disposition and do sensibly respect of others rights and 
feelings social, and shun of all other. 

183 



or restrain of right or wrong conduct and- intuitive of 
God, a secondary motive to primary motive in sus- 
pense (see within of occasion), and prevalent or no 
as the personal sense and disposition characteristicly 
or circumstantially strong or weak to righteous- 
ness — characteristically limited in the savage, vari- 
ably perverted .of interest (43 *) like or dislike (11 E 
X &) in the civilized, and entirely absent in animals. 
Motives then recipiently or unprevailingly ignore or 
indifferent to right, ever intuitive of the Devil — a sum 
of all that to evil. [Of restraint-, "the fear of evil 
rather than the promise of good brings obedience to 
law" — hence easy dispensations or uncertainties of 
apprehension to disobedience past, greatly annuls the 
motives to restraint future — see ingeunity of priestly 
remuneration to this evasion so prevalent in the mass- 
es, and comfortable to clergy] . 

LIBERTY AND RESTRAINT. 

51 Then all voluntary doing and not doing of 
things in ivealth most practicably beneficial to life and 
equivalent in productive value, is lawful liberty : and 
all doing and not doing of thing outside that lawful 
in wealth (43), is unlawful liberty. 

See piracy of the present now riot in misrepre- 
sentation and combinate extortion; representative, and 
monopolizing exclusion of productive rights to others ; 
slipping and insinuating technicality of law; political 
and legislative deception and bribery; purpositional 
notoriety (11 E f), to corporate sycophancy; false re- 
port injurious or death dealing commodity, and brazen 
faced-hold-up-capitalistic conservatism — of purpose in 
notoriety-, see corporate influences secretly behind the 
press ard Senatorial Congress]. 

52 Then restriction of human action or inaction 
to that within the bounds of laivful doing or not doing 
{per force or fear) most practicable * of time and 



* Superlative of cheap and stern punishment — corporal 
punishment for persistent misdemeanor, and the branding iron, 
ban of unprotection, or death for persistent felony. Moran wrong 

184 



place, is lawful resraint: and enforcement or re- 
striction of do or not do to that without the bounds of 
laivful life (per force or fear), is unlawful re- 
straint. 

RIGHT AND DUTY. 

53 Then rights and duty of use, are the any 
rights to lawful use of person and property lawful in 
status, and duty of others to not interfere : and rights 
and duties of gift and inheritance, the any rights of 
one and duties of another to transfer of things 'of 
wealth tuithout usual remuneration in all natural suc- 
cessions of property (43 fl) to another lawful in func- 
tion, all acts of accommodation lawful in result, all 
relief of poverty or distress essential to life, and all 
tokens of esteem or friendship essential to merit and 
good fellowship. 

Therefore, all demands or requests for things of 
gift or inheritance outside of right and duty, is un- 
lawful gift or inheritance. [For unlawful gifts-, in- 
stance that of food and raiment given to professional 
tramps of every description, and moneys given to pen- 
sion charitable and other parasites of every designa- 
tion — (as persons high or low receiving moneys with- 
out disabilities incurred or unrequited services ren- 
dered a nation or other division of people in some law- 
ful services to society, or that greater than disability 
incurred or service rendered) : appropriations made to 
enterprises of local scheming to unlawful gain under 
pretenses of public benefits, unrestricted grants of 
legalized rights long of gain to the grantee, or short 
of benefits to the represented grantor] . 



and right, are to be distinguished from right and wrong synony- 
mous with the values of procedure to some end in view, by mor- 
als a respect or disrespect of the rights of self or others, & 
[Rights of self and duties to self, are the functional needs of 
body and mind beneficially satisfied in a duty of effort within 
and without most practicably essential and proportionate pos- 
sible as any environment of direct and reciprocating wealth 
same in duty,- fact of not.] 

185 



54 Then rights and duties of express or implied 
contracts (44), are rights and duties to return of a 
some specific thing lawfully entrusted to other use or 
keep, lawful remuneration {only) for things of wealth 
exchanged, and lawful indemnity for unlawful injuries 
{none other) to person or property. 

Therefore deceptive * or forcible receivings tak- 
ings or holdings of things of wealth by other means 
than lawful barter sale gift or inheritance, is extortion 
robbery trespass or breach of trust,- statutory custom- 
ary or conventional, or against statute custom or con- 
vention. *i [See soothing and interestedly endorsed 
finesse of official and capitalistic guilt here to cover of 
this in technicality of law and manipulated sentiment 
disrespect of right]. 

COROLLARIES. 

55 From ratios of cost to value in kind to kind 
necessary to a most approximate proportionateness 
practicable in ivealth-, it follows that a unit of social 
union underproportionate (51 tj) in their deals with 
other members, are so far parasitic members of that 
union — high low rich or poor. Therefore dispropor- 
tionate pleasures idleness and vices of kind against 
other greater industriousness of sort, subsist in even 
ratio thereon upon the efforts economies and efficiencies 
of others exploited to make up their own unlawful 
shortage of effort. * 

* Thus by present let alone policy of free greed 
gift and inheritance-, a very greatly the smaller and 
stronger portion of mankind have greatly monopolized 
all the best enjoyments of life at the expense of the 
toiling masses unremittingly and disdainfully left with- 
in the pales of a painfully slavish and muchly unre- 
munerated toil. & [The factors to this antithesis of 
wealth, are variable fortunateness hogishness arbi- 
trariness shrewdness cunning or providence apart or 



* "For he considered inducements that operated against 
reason as no better than force: — to be deceived was with him 
the same as compelled." [Solonsr Laws Plutarch, Unremunera- 
tion same, mode different — 43 @ ] 

186 



whatever way combined of the one, and variable un- 
fortunateness stupidity subserviency credulousness or 
improvidence apart or whatever way combined the 
other. By many having experience with the indigent 
poor and profligate of our cities (a sorry set of para- 
sites)-, it has been ascertained that a large majority 
of such persons are hopelessly incompetent to manage 
an honest living for themselves or families: — hence 
the only treatment for such to self maintenance in law- 
ful wealth, is a some humane form of self sustaining 
servitude — probably one-third the human race are un- 
fit the rights of freemen laissez faire] . f 

f "The uprising [Watt Tyler's Rebellion] how- 
ever was not in vain : — for by it * * * villainage 
was gradually abolished, and the English laborer ac- 
quired that greatest yet most perilous of all rights,-,- 
the complete ownership of himself — so long as he was 
serf-, the peasant could claim assistance from his mas- 
ter in sickness and old age — (Appendix G) ; in attain- 
ing independence-, he had to risk the danger of pauper- 
ism which began with it — this possibility being part 
the price which man must everywhere pay for the priv- 
ilege of freedom." [Freedom here, privileges of in- 
competency or prodigality, and dangers of a selfish 
shrewdness and cunning of others strong in "free- 
dom." Quotation above, is from Montgomery's text 
book of English History. Amendment of a criminal 
vagrant and thriftless freedom, is an enforced self- 
sustaining servitude present and contingent of help- 
lessness unseen or old age presumed,- and not an en- 
richment of an any free grabbing selfishness above — 
effort above this, an effort additional to this in per- 
missive freedom. & Causes of poverty, muchly of a 
run-down potter-about half do shiftless vagrant or in- 
discreet coordination to a product, or an expenditure 
faster or fast as make,- in a trickling ivaste or extrav- 
agance depletory of an industrious potential. [See 16 
z z here, drunkenness attendant vice, and refusal or 
congestion of opportunity in slum centers of labor and 
congeniality — easy recruits such to socialistic delusions 
imbibed of an iterating and infecting swarmery (11 e), 

187 



and a primitive instinct systematically loosed to would 
be raid of saving* others,- over look or ignore of ef- 
ficient work, or the practice of frugality. [11 D x. 
The other end of this its antithesis-, see actual raid 
of others (the sufferers of both) in free contract com- 
bination and official extravagance]. 

56 From individual rights in breech of honor 
more economically amenable than sufferance-, SPRINGS 
authority TO restraint. [Form of authority-, a that 
the most economic and efficient practicable of the cir- 
cumstances'] . 

57 Production a developing of things of wealth 
to individual or corporate gain irrespective of benefits 
in sort, and proportionateness in wealth, is UNLAWFUL 
evolution: production (causes) developing things of 
wealth to individual copartner or corporate gain re- 
spective greater benefits of kind, and greater propor- 
tionateness in cost and value, is lawful evolution @. 

@ See in contrast here "pitiless" (wholly un- 
avoidable) evolution industrial of the economists sooth- 
ing (optimistic) to the strong, and helpless (pessi- 
mistic) to the weak: — a distortion of natural evolu- 
tion (exceptionally fatal only,- 16 A *),- in that there 
cannot possibly be a resurrection of the eliminated in 
extinction (direct or transient), while there practically 
can be and necessarily will be in the later end of hu- 
man existence planetary (29 a;) a greater to less prim- 
itive resurrection of means and commodities substi- 
tuted of industrial evolution: — conflict in industrial 
evolution itself, not an eliminator of the menial alone,- 
in that destruction of him in the conflict would be a de- 
struction of the parasitic relation of immense wealth 
in the rich. To a conceptive verification of this-, de- 
stroy quickly or slowly in mind the common laborer 
(or population) of society, and reason out the effect 
it would have on the value of rentals, modes of pro- 
duction transportation (liners etc) and consumption, 
and a consequent restoration of more primitive means, 
and commodity for the remainder * @. Evolution in- 



* @ "A sparce population and want, make every man his 
own valet cook butcher and soldier. [Emerson 

188 



dustrial-, a substitution of means and commodity old 
by others new, and more or less transfer of labor. Hu- 
man survival and elimination "pitiless," a conflict of 
population to necessary subsitence bettered or made 
worse or cheaper of the methods old to new as the case 
may be — (at such times garners of save opening up 
of new sources, foresight sympathy fear violence or 
theft as intensity of need and opportunity deter- 
mine) : — industrial evolution then a substituted contin- 
uation of the old in the new, and not an annihilation of 
the menial — "work-house gruel," a reluctant preven- 
tion of such at worst, and a carrying over muchly a 
returning parasitic succor — 55. See further "Altru- 
ism" in-doctrinated and seized upon from high quarters 
as a palliation of this "pitiless" evolution, so excusably 
soothing to high hiding selfishness] . 



PHILOSOPHY OF MATTER AND FORCE. 

58 All matter and force (life included,- 30 x) of 
ultimate material and immaterial conditions of exist- 
ence as substance or essence in an any aggregation or 
diffusion, is, was, always was; or beginning, began 
of nothing when and how * ; and always having ex- 
isted, always will exist; or ceasing to exist, will become 
nothing when and how. 

b All matter and force in their ultimate elements 
of form magnitude and density, occupy space, occupied 
space, always occupied space, and always will occupy 



* Ultimate elements here having no formation of origin, 
are without a whence or how of formation so thoroughly im- 
pressed on mind by surrounding experiences of aggregation and 
division as to quite ignore the sense of necessity here reflectively 
and exceptively a corrective of it a universality. [See Doctrines 
of Dualism, Monism and Infinite Divisibility — Monism here 
(30 x), a oneness of matter and force in kind physical, and 
Dualism, a correlative combination of life matter and life force 
with the inorganic as the organic a duality. Infinite Divisibility 
requiring a forever time-' makes it an impossibility in fact or 
conception. Phenomena and the transcendental, the all of ex- 
istence and pure space — 17 $ ] 

189 



space — or not occupying space, occupy what 9 Q : — 
therefore all matter inorganic force and life in their 
ultimate conditions of existence, are continuous exist- 
ences of space — unlimited in time, limited in coexist- 
ence. [Time, infinity past with infinity to be] . 

*I 1& Sir William Hamilton in his Distinction of 
Primary and Secondary Qualities of Body Critically 
Considered" and under "Deduction of the Primary 
Qualities," says that "Space or extension, is a neces- 
sary form of thought * * * ; but that we are not so 
necessitated to imagine the reality of aught occupying 
space — (for while unable to conceive as null the space 
in which the material universe exists-, the material 
universe itself we can without difficulty annihilate in 
thought)': and a little beyond this-, Hamilton main- 
tains that space is solely necessary in conception ; while 
the conscious body by some manner in conception is 
contingent of space in that it "occupies space and is 
contained in space. Now body suppressible or divisible 
into nothing, is as conceptive an impossibility as sup- 
pression or division of space into a no space — (59 *) ; 
therefore they are both on a par to each other in neces- 
sity of existence or thought ; and though distinguished 
as greater and less of magnitude-, greatness of mag- 
nitude is no more necessary than lessness of magni- 
tude: — therefore Body and Space, are always in 
thought as the positive something, and negative noth- 
ing (pure space) of the all — no affirmation or negation 
at all declarable behind this absolute limit of thought,- 
thing or no-thing. 

Again explanatory of this-, Hamilton says "The 
notion of space, is thus native,- or a priori; and the 
notion of what space contains * * * , is that of body,- 
and a posteori * * * ; — how do we come by our 
knowledge of space * * * — whether given solely 
a priori, or acquired solely a posteriori-, it will be ad- 
mitted that we are only able to conceive body as that 
which occupies space" etc. Now our conception of 
space, is represented (11 n) in our perceptions of scat- 
tered light in air, absences of sensible resistance in air 
among tangible objects, and darkness among tangible 

190 



objects of sight and touch when dark. The conception 
of "body" annihilated, is represented in diffusive van- 
ishment of visible objects into perceptivity of scat- 
tered light in air or darkness, or the evaporation or 
melting away of tangible objects in light or darkness : 
— thus leaving tangible body not always coexistent 
with positive or negative sight, but represented space 
(intangible something), and intangible something it- 
self always present in feeling substratum of light and 
darkness. [Intangible something, becoming tangible 
at times in blow or resistance of air and volatile sub- 
stances ponderable]. 

59 Successive or renewed forms of matter and 
force, integrate from other forms of disintegration * ; 
have in times past, and always have; and always hav- 
ing integrated from other forms of disintegration, al- 
ivays will. 

Therefore successive or renewed forms of mat- 
ter and force, are limited in their respective individu- 
alities to supplies of space and time. [For this law-, 
see all formations of mass molecule and atom in inor- 
ganic matter, vegetation, and animal life; their disin- 
tegrations of dissolution and reappearance in other 
succeeding forms, ad finem conditions of animal life 
vegetation and earthly aggregation ^ ^. [29] 

*I ^ Severed or dissevered individuals of sort 
recurring of kind (22 e) in their factors of disinte- 
gration and other integration through any number of 
intervening other kinds scattered of thing in their turn 
of succession-, recur in kind and quantity as varied 
differentiation of the components in kind to kind dis- 
solved, and variation their intermediate integrations 
(very slow) kind to kind mediate a return kind des- 
ignated: — all as intervening differentiations of sort 
and quantity as nucleuses of force and environing sup- 
ply enforce of any succession of things massive mole- 
cular and atomic. [16 *, 28 d] 

59 B Then planet and sun by participation and 
factor in universal integration and disintegration 



* This inference, is based upon experience and necessity ,- 
by the impossibility of increase or decrease of matter or force 
by creation from nothing or annihilation into nothing. 



191 



(58, 29), must have originated or replenished of other 
disintegrations from an immense past to an immedi- 
ate present — as reproductions or renewals from other 
disintegrations of kind osculant in nonbeginning. 
Again : all other integrative forms of matter and force 
(including life) of the universe by participation in the 
laws of earthly phenomena, must by parity of reason- 
ing be of infinite integrations and disintegrations of 
kind and quantity ad infinitum: — of relative superi- 
ority and inferiority of organization time and place as 
coordinations of an any developing conserving or dis- 
solving nexus of affinities in physical and organic in- 
tegration, and environing incidences and values of 
supply and temperatures enforce of any simple and 
complex disintegrations environing, and forms develop- 
ing conserving or dissolving (57 @) of the any time 
and place. [27 c] 

b Therefore, other of all life in the universal by 
variation in reproduction in whole or of any part 
(22 e), have evolved conserved and dissolved, or are 
evolving conserving or dissolving to some referred or 
typical condition of things as ocordinations within and 
external forces of supply without have conditioned in 
all such respective existences: — all a universe of in- 
distructible atoms or lesser elements of matter and 
force (physical and organic) @ never increasing and 
never decreasing in their ever various meanderings of 
diffusion and integration osculant from the is to the 
was, and from the was to the always was, and from the 
always having been to the always will be : — all an in- 
finite aggregation and variation of things in form 
simple to man (the good and evil), and GOD (ever 
good) and the Devil,- ever evil. [God ever promptu of 
that good in man, the Devil ever that evil] . 



@ Reveal of individual soul a monad (30 x) or an indis- 
soluble spiritual unity-' immortality of the soul disembodied 
bodied and disembodied again rationalizes thus: — substance or 
soul (soul a unity here) embodied or disembodied, cannot have 
come from nothing nor be dissolved to nothing — (hence a non- 
beginning and a nonending) : Aggregations individual of sub- 

192 



NATURAL THEOLOGY. 

60 Tenet 1. God then to man in cause, is the 
that spiritually intuitive to all motives of righteous do 
or restraint prevalent or no in universal life,- nonbe- 
ginning and nonending of essence in time. [3 $ $ &} 

Tenet 2. The Devil then to man, in cause, is the 
that promptu to all motives of unrighteous do or re- 
strain prevalent or no in universal life,- nonbeginning 
and nonending of essence in time. 

stance and soul beginning, are conscious such awhile and end; 
consciousness such reaches not back to its disembodied pre-ex- 
istence necessarily past, but continues to a disembodied existence 
again future: — hence disembodied soul, and individual existence 
bodied, are not identical; but disembodied soul pre and after by 
indissoluble unity, are identical — hence disembodied soul can 
only know disembodied spirit,- but visiting awhile in the bodied 
existence, may by reminiscent impress never before experienced 
connect with it the two disembodied existences same, and identi- 
fy the whole; or not, the after identity the before,- a phenomena 
inferred as the unsensed substance or essence transcendently 
substratum to embodiment. [Embodiment, an organic and in- 
organic integration and a catching up of a unit spiritually and 
transmuting it for a while into bodily consciousness, and return- 
ing it again to its primitive state the all of two existences, & 
Hence the possibility of a reminiscence of the spiritual world 
may have something at the bottom it so transcendental as to be 
quite impossible to an embodied sense of it an existence: — hence 
quite the impossibility of God (a spiritual transcendental) mani- 
festing himself to embodiment other than spiritual cause to 
spiritual recipiency reveal of thing to righteous know and do. 
(See Paul's conversion). See farther visitation of our disem- 
bodied friends to recipient mind touched within us, is not an im- 
possibility — transfer of spiritual substance (30 x) , an easy mat- 
ter in conceptive passivity and spiritual motivity through an 
ethereal medium diffuse of all matter and space — hence "Sun, 
moon and stars forgot upward I flly" may not wholly be a figure, 
but a revelation elect of genius) : vice versa, entrance same to 
an earthly mingle and embodiment opportune suitable conditions 
to an initiating power (24 x) of integration. Test of Revelation 
a message from God, a coincidence with embodied nature or 
transcendental existence so far as possible to embodied mentality 
past to present. [ 3 t &, 16 @ & ] 

193 



Tenet 3. God is infinitely * righteous in all in- 
fluences direct and indirect to moral goodness only. 

Tenet 4. The Devil, is everly * unrighteous in all 
depraved volitions or influences direct and indirect to 
evil only. 

Tenet 5. God then is only sovereign @ in all pre- 
vailing motives for moral good and against moral 
evil: — in other words-, God is frustrated in power by 
all actuated wickedness — as per the fact he cannot do 
moral evil without losing the character of moral good- 
ness, -_and thereby becoming devil. 

TENET 6. Then the Devil (50 &) is only sovereign 
in all ignores or indifferences of motive to moral good : 
— in other words-, the devil is frustrated in power by 
all actual goodness — as per the fact, he cannot do 
moral good without losing the character of moral evil,- 
and thereby becoming God. [7 M <fe] 

m Therefore in prevalent power of God to only 
moral goodness actual, and concomitant prevailing 
power of the devil to only actual evil-, God and the 
Devil ever in conflict with each other in the creature 
variably partake in power to goodness and evil in the 
creature as degrees of their any existing effectiveness 
oppositional — terms compounded of any quite all indi- 
vidual goodness with little evil ^ to any quite all in- 



* The infinite here, is the inestimatable limited of exist- 
ence, and the unlimitedly limited of sequence: — All a sequent 
unlimitedness of coexistent limitedness. 

@ Sovereignty here, confined to intuitive promptus pre- 
vailing in do of right or restraint of evil (influences of hesitancy 
not rule), and not physical causes (58 *) often in conflict with 
the doctrine of a physical intermeddling providence — providence 
confined to mutualities of good through intuitive promptus of 
motive (3 x) in others. [Motive, a combination of two recip- 
iencies to knowledge objective, and an emotion within — hence 
Inspiration and utterance, an intuition of knowledge and 
motive.] 

fl "And he answered and said unto him,-Master all these 
things have I observed from my youth." 

"Then Jesus beholding him loved him,, and said unto him,- 
one thing lackest thou. [St. Mark ch. 10, v 20, 21.] 

194 



dividual evil with little goodness, f [All of ratios de- 
terminately good, bad or indeterminate $ ] . 

n Therefore the ever iperfect creature as an in- 
strument of God to a Revelation, contaiminates of var- 
iable degree pure inspirations of God by additions sub- 
tractions transpositions and other confusions (11 A w) 
that are specialized in the individual from the morally 
evil of his nature: — therefore in the interpretation of 
a Revelation given anywise through man-, man's im- 
perfections therein, must be accounted out by a some 
cvritehion most practicably approximate to the truth 
under an any existing circumstances of the time — and 
common sense unmolested being the final arbiter of 
inferred knowledge (11 D ![)-, it follows that in ques- 
tion of authority the only legitimate appeal lies in the 
original ground work itself,- experience or neces- 
sity * * . 

* * This exposition of the fundamentals to Na- 
tural Theology-, obviates the conflict of evil with God's 
"infinite goodness" absolutely unlimited and "infinite 



t "When Jim was dead, hit sarved him right the neigh- 
bors sed, and bused him for the life he led, an him a lying there 
at rest with not a rose upon his breast; ah menny cruel words 
they sed when Jim was dead, jes killed hissef, two mean ter 
live; they dident have one word to give, of comfort as they 
hovered near an gazed on Jim a lying there; there ant not use 
to talk they sed,- he's better dead. But sudden then all turned to 
still, and God's white sunshine seemed to fill the darken place 
with a gleam of life, and over the dead she bent,- Jim's wife; 
and with her lips close to his (as though he knew and felt the 
kiss) she sobbed (a techin sight to see) Ah Jim was always 
good to me". 

$ Of indeterminate ratio of the good and evil in conflict 
in the creature-, the following quotation from one of Mark 
Twaine's works will illustrate such: — "Deys two angels hoveren 
around him — one is white and shiny en tother one is black: de 
white gits him to do right a little while, den de black one sail 
in and bust it all up; a body caent tell which one gwine to fetch 
him at de las". 

195 



power" absolutely unlimited current of most exposi- 
tions of current theology: — as theoretically contra- 
dictory,- in that if God was "infinitely good" and "in- 
finitely powerful"-, "infinite goodness" and "infinite 
power" by unlimited goodness and power all existence 
would necessarily exclude all evil: neither to explain 
away the common sense view of "infinite goodness" 
and "infinite power" in conflict-, it is not necessary 
to assume a "mystery of God" being apparently the 
author of sin, and by his nature not its author; nor 
as another school-, it is not necessary to explain away 
the common sense view of a theory of "permission" — 
permission entangling itself in an admission of a pow- 
er separate from God.- in that permission assumes 
two powers distinctly related as one a permittor, and 
one permitted. [In all this-, there is but one alterna- 
tive, either all power for good and evil comes from 
God, or comes from God and a distinct something else 
called the Devil : — common sense admits the latter, and 
a long maintained iteration maintains the form£ with 
a sophistry in permission, or an escape of the difficulty 
in a mystery beyond man's comprehension — a faith 
against common sense. [Amendable in a rational Pro- 
testantism (16 A $ &) and a saving of all that in the- 
ology not in conflict with common sense — 10 m x : — 
see insinuations of Romanism and Judaism not yet ex- 
pelled of the Reformation and since. The masses of 
mankind still need and deserve a good religion — (16 
A $ &\ — Paul rather than Peter grafted in the Acts 
— see New Testament and Gibbons fifteenth and six- 
teenth chapters Millmans Gibbons Rome]. 

LANGUAGE PUNCTUATION AND COMPOSITION. 

61 Language, is the any naming of a something 
or attribute of sort in mind, and the any predication 
of it or them in a some positive negative or indeter- 
minate other name of so?*t same or other to apprehen- 
sion. [13, 14] 

Of proposition, all as that usual of an any con- 
secutive arrangement of words to name (12), and 

196 



names to proposition subjective and predicative: — all 
as that of an any subject word or words and predicate 
word or words concert a some leading word or words 
with or without limiting word or words precedent of 
connection, or phrase or phrases or sentence or sen- 
tences followingly connected apart or whatever way 
combined. [Sentences often abridged]. 

x All knowledge of thing or attribute by lan- 
guage, is by concomitant sameness whole or part of 
thing or attribute in subject or leader of expression, 
and that its predicate or substitute coalesced or dis- 
criminated of definition or description comparatively 
the terms — as often supplemented with additional ex- 
pressions implicative repetitive explanatory or inci- 
dental. & [Identification indiscriminate of expression, 
is to be discriminated from identification sequent of 
sameness,- in that of concomitant comparison, the 
thing or attribute of subject or other leading expres- 
sion, is wholly or partly same with its name predicate 
or substitute by both terms of concomitant apprehen- 
sion in reflection; while that of sequence to compari- 
son, the thing or attribute identified of subject or 
other leading expression, is same by discriminate sep- 
aration of one term in some apprehension present, and 
the other term a some apprehension past of it and 
same — terms here concert of two distinct times of ap- 
prehension in identification, and of a single coexistent 
apprehension of definition or description reflect. Of 
proposition-, the asking of a question, is but a straight 
or reverse promptu of that to be given or no in the 
answer — straight of "It is what or where," and re- 
versed of "what or where is it, will you go etc. [See 
here yes or no an abridgement of proposition impliedly 
promptu of question]. 

m Form of language, is the any vocal or sym- 
bolic arrangement (3) of articulations in syllables 
(aglutinate letters), syllables in words, words in name, 
names in proposition, and propositions in discourse; 
quality their any concerting effects on mind intellect- 
ual emotional and volitional — (3 x) : — All as letters 
syllables and words themselves acquiring different 
forms of character accent sound and meaning as abra- 
sions loss and compounds add of letters and syllables 

197 



composing them have taken place in the utterances of 
men — variation in word, a matter of phonetic ease to 
acquiring articulation in word local introduced or ad- 
mixed: conservation, a common phonetic easiness not 
to be improved or substituted in all concerts of con- 
tact. 

RULES OF PUNCTUATION. 

62 To pause and distinction of distinct parts of 
speech, place a comma smaller of subdivisions (or 
other mark) between an any subjective verbal or less 
leading words modified in one more or all the leaders 
by a some expressed or implied word phrase or sen- 
tence distinctly belonging to each leader,- and not a 
common modifier of them all alike. 

Place a comma between a subject and its verb 
when descriptive in name (12), and between all sub- 
jects and predicates when verb is implied. 

Place a hyphen and comma after an expression 
of sort transposed to its subject, and vice versa before 
a supplementary expression belonging to a division of 
the comma terminating in a pause greater than a 
comma: and place in parenthesis any supplementary 
expression within or terminating a division separated 
by a comma. [For examples of punctuation by com- 
ma-, see same in the text of this book excepting larger 
comma not yet in printers stock]. 

In punctuation of larger divisions of speech than 
those of the comma-, place a semicolon (or other 
mark) between an any paired or enumerated objects 
subjects or propositions compounded and divided by 
a principal division of the comma in any or all the 
terms of semicolon compound; also unrelated proposi- 
tions as examples quotations etc divided with a comma. 

Place in parenthesis preceded by a dash (or 
other mark) any subjoined expression positively nega- 
tively or indeterminately of a some express or implied 
implication repetition explanation incidence or refer- 
ence to an any expression divided by a semicolon or 
colon; and place a dash only to all such expressions 
ending at a period. 

In punctuation of divisions of speech containing 

198 



semicolon or semicolons in one or both terms of such 
division or other, place a COLON between any paired 
or enumerated objects propositions or predicates di- 
vided in one or all their terms by a semicolon ; also all 
introductory expressions or conjoined but distinct 
propositions calling for a full stop to sense : and place 
a COLON and a dash or simply a dash between a prop- 
osition and any immediately conjoined subjunct or sub- 
juncts supplementary of implication repetition explan- 
ation incidence or reference. 

Of punctuation to parts of speech greater than 
those of the semicolon or colon simple, place a capital 
letter at the beginning, and a period at the ending 
of an any proposition or propositions unrelated or ex- 
haustive of other punctuation. [For examples to 
punctuation here-, see text of this book for the same, 
and a what more you like] . 



RULES OF COMPOSITION. 

63 Of greatest economy and efficiency practic- 
able in composition-, select principal words and ad- 
juncts with or without suhjuncts, and arrange them in 
a consecutive or transposed order most practically co- 
incident to a correct apprehension of that intended 
to be conveyed, and a greatest east of effort * . 



* See cult of statuary painting pose or action here in 
positions of body and composure or play of countenance natural 
or easy of effort, and (to the critical at least) more pleasing 
than those of artificial or tiresome effort — hence easy sitting 
and composed countenance of statuary Egyptian and other, and 
careless or natural attitude of living pose and countenance, more 
pleasing than artificial and uneasy positions of body or expres- 
sions of countenance. [Hence of faddish affectation-, the un- 
natural and strained effort of artificial women to pass the op- 
posite sex without the natural glance of the eye,- more usual 
of the male sex and children, and unaffected woman natural in 
their habits of concourse. The upholding of the right arm and 
torch of our liberty statues and fountains of our day, suggests 

199 



Then antithetical of all confusions superfluities 
ambiguties misplacements or unbalances of expres- 
sion-, cut out all solecistic and superfluous expressions 
of word practicable, and transform and transpose all 
ambiguous unbalanced and misplaced expressions so 
alterable to that that will give a most natural sense 
practicable to things, and a greatest east of effort. 
Of solecism in composition-, exampled in all compound 
of words equivalent or nearly equivalent in meaning, 
or variably composed of elements same in construc- 
tion, and greatly avoidable and unavoidable in com- 
position. Of superfluity-, exampled of all unnecessary 
words a confusion or overload of expression to easy 
comprehension of that intended to be conveyed. [The 
primary object of language, is to convey or bring to 
mind things or attributes intended of them in name 
and proposition; and whatever words are easiest and 
best or as good as others to this end, are best or as 



efforts extremely tiresome; also artificial and unmeaning pose, 
or distortions of countenance in our drama and posters, are un- 
graceful and foolish to those pleased with the ease and natural- 
ness of dramatic and every day life. See graceful and un- 
graceful moves of walk trot run and work, and trace out their 
factoral reasons in all poises and movements of limbs and body 
a concert all of such — (many persons need training to easy and 
economizing movements many to some their modes of do in life) : 
— aesthetics here, founded in ease of effort to curveliner move- 
ment and in-abrupt pause and change of direction to movement. 
In moving machinery-, see rotary motion and sweeps of liner 
or curveliner movement pleasing, and jiggling movements same 
unpleasing: and of great power added-, see the graceful here 
and the imposing mingled; and of unpleasing movement and 
great power combined-, see such a disturber of feeling. Of 
great power to movement or equilibrium without the feeling of 
fear-, see grandeur of storm ocean wave, and the gigantic cliffs 
of mountain scenery. See further harmonies and inharmonies 
of word and other expression in their conjunctions with each 
other (64), and power (65) of easy voice and word. 

200 



good : — thus the natural and brief word "et," is better 
and easier of orthography than its display one "ate",- 
irrespective a whatever authority or college shibboleth 
distinctive to common people. Our easiest and best 
language on the whole, is greatly of natural growth in 
the common discourses of people naturally wearing off 
the more rugged connections and harder pronuncia- 
tions of speech — hence all display or artificial pronun- 
ciation or composition caprice a whatever authority to 
show off ones school training for prestige among the 
uneducated or admiring smatterer, is a piece of down- 
right tomfoolery and weak minded vanity. Of a decep- 
tion of the ignorant by word-, see most interested ora- 
tory letters etc, and latin label displays and technical- 
ities of medicine: — the latter a professional device to 
mystify the uninformed, appear medically learned, and 
mist over the many remunerative frauds, and spade 
covered homicides of drugology and medicine. Of the 
so much ridiculed vocabulary of the uneducated by 
"cultured" conceit-, note the ease of pronunciation and 
abridgment of it, and often laconic pointedness of 
meaning, butt of this smatter. For discrepancy of 
word to fact-, see allegation in the crucibles of demon- 
strate investigation — (a fine subject for our govern- 
ment experiment station work or other) : also dis- 
crepancy of expression to fact, or artificial or ignorant 
extensions diminutions or misses of natural word to 
facts imposed]. 

Of greatest practical economy to emphasis in 
speech-, emphasize all parts of speech that will natur- 
ally bring up to mind all implied circumstances of im- 
plication otherwise not brought up, or that if left out 
would bring up other circumstances implied by the 
omission : also emphasize all portions of speech in that 
wanted to greatly impress the mind or arouse notice. 

n Of emphasis exampled as follows : — / am go- 
ing — (and not you the emphasis implies) : I am go- 
ing — (and no prohibition or failure about it,- the em- 
phasis implies) : I am going to town,- so I am — (and 
nowhere else the emphasis implies) : I am going all 
the same — (and you needn't say no about it the em- 
phasis implies) : I shall go this very day — and not 
some other day the emphasis implies. Again : if he 

801 



goes / will go; if he don't go / won't go: If he goes, 
why all right; and if he don't go, I will send. [For 
more of this-, listen carefully for emphasis in common 
conversation, and study out the circumstantial mean- 
ing @ ; also note variation of the meanings of word 
in composure and surprise; and polyphony of mean- 
ings to a same word in primitive language, and enum- 
erate meanings of word in our dictionaries — see diffi- 
culties now of understanding primitive polyphony 
(their variable meanings of a same word) by the em- 
phasis and its place in their speech nearly lost to us. & 
Compare natural speech with oratory, literary compo- 
sitions, and sing song read : also literary and oratorical 
composition extolled to the skies, and natural speech 
ridiculed. See abstruse literature emphasized upon, 
and minutely studied as a magic wand to lofty concepts 
of sort hidden high up from the multitude in a mystic 
grandeur of mighty mind beyond the ken of ordinary 
comprehension — a roseate truth to some extent mag- 
nified to undue importance, and often wrested to in- 
terested or boughten distractions to common delusion 
— 65. See Goethe Shakespeare and other extolled be- 
yond all sense and reason — costly scintillations of an 
exquisite pathos, pungent keenness, softest sweetness, 
and wiseless usefulness. [See of late old oratory great- 
ly substituted in plain talk or misleading diversion; 
also conversational talk and composition shyly creep- 
ing onto the rostrum — (of the comic to this-, see Ezra 
Kendall) ; and for the power of crowning Evangelism, 
see word pictures of common say and do point their 
electro-magnetic influences — an easy play of word to 
an every day comprehension]. 



@ See "Where am I", an inquiry of lost confusion; and 
44 Where am /", an inquiring answer of a question not surely 
understood to be a question "Where are you" in another. 

202 



Appendix A. 

64. Hence of articulation (here English)-, a e and o, are 
three aspirations as a e (of a) and e and o suppressed alike in a 
clip of broad a; i and u, a coalesce combination of a broad clipped 
shortly by the tongue lifting quickly to central accent of i end- 
ing in a clip of e, and e short and accent o long each sounded 
distinctly in u; nasal sounds confined to two vowel sounds rather 
indefinitely e short or o broad and long apart, or repeated or con- 
joined in a rising inflection, diaphragmic suppression, and fall- 
ing inflection again terminal — (for examples, close the mouth 
and make all aspirations fewly possible in any key of tone) : 
consonants, an any combination of suppressions mouthy and 
vowel sounds aspiratory: — exampled in b forming in a nasal gut- 
teral o close of nasal passage, compression of the lips together 
and their explosive separation into the short sound of e; c form- 
ing in a forward hissing tongue suppression of diaphragmic ex- 
pulsion, and sudden loose of the same in a short e; d forming of 
a complete tongue suppression forward, and explosion in short 
e; f forming in a slight broad sound clip of a, and ending in a 
lip suppressing and hissing e; g forming of a forward tongue 
suppression, and an explosion in short e; h forming of an a 
short in a complete intermediate tongue suppression of it cen- 
trally to a secondary hiss and end in short e; j a forward tongue 
suppression and explosion in long a; k an intermediate tongue 
suppressed e exploding in a long a; Z an aspiring a, and diffusely 
forward tongue suppressing e; m an a-e suppressed by the lips 
concomitant a nasal o; n an a-e suppressed sharper than that of 
b; q a close intermediate pressed tongue suppression exploding in 
u; r a broad a suppresed whirringly of the tongue posterior; s a 
blended a-e suppressed in a somewhat prolonged forward hiss 
ending in a shortly broad; t a forward suppressed aspiration ex- 
ploding in short e; v a hissing lip suppression exploded in a 
short e; w practically ho of begin in syllable, and sound of a 
whatever next; x an e c finished in the hiss of s; y a broad clip 
of a long broad o, and short e; z a gutteral hissing and inter- 
mediate tongue suppression exploding in short e. [See formation 
of syllables samely in the elements of consonant and vowel ever 
combined in some aspiration and suppression or vice versa and 
formatively syllabic and only of articulation — y often taking the 
place of i in an aspiration of o broad and long changed by the 
lips (through i) ending in the continued aspiration diaphragm- 
ical suppressed in a touch of e. In experiments here to elemen- 

203 



tary phonetics, sound the letters slowly start to finish, and keep 
the attention closely on the clip or plainer catch of the vowels, 
and their changes in suppression whole to any hissing or dif- 
fusive grade same: also note further easy to hard articulations 
of syllables in word and words in clause or proposition by ter- 
minal position of tongue and lips variably coincident to incoinci- 
dent of place to other commencement of a syllable or word to 
follow; and again the impossibility of sounding two consonants 
or vowels together only, and many other combinations of letters 
in syllable or their substitution by other letters in sound — See 
tia in sha, chi in shi, tion in shun etc [See variation loss and 
changes of relations in syllables to word and word to word in 
differing times and places Argan up] 

Appendix B. 

65 Of man dog horse servant neighbor friend implement 
shelter faction leader cause or defense affecting us in an op- 
positional manner-, we like and dislike the subject affecting us 
thus as the blend of like and dislike casual in mind (11 E m), 
or that enhanced or suppressed for an outside purpose. [See 
in this sophistry of like enhanced and dislike suppressed justified 
ridiculed or glossed over-, finesse of the artful politician or 
principal or other leader to a suppression wardoff cover up or 
misplace of things and intentions of sort naturally disliked or 
disapproved in constituency patron or other by a flush or 
selected parade of a pleasing soothing or approved others sub- 
mit of flattery interest delusion humor or abuse, and distract 
of attention other f. Of other play on like and dislike of sort-, 
see practices of barrister and court in suppressions deprecia- 
tions exaggerations delusions misrepresentations inclusions and 
exclusions of sort evidencial technical or decisional — a cold cal- 
culating sophistry of word influence and do wilful or unwilful 
of practice. 

t See distraction here in the sophistries of remunerative 
deception delusion and extortion now ruling the world in the 
importanizing emphasis and parade of literary educational and 
sensational subjects of sort to a paramount popular agitation 
of a must be somehow exercised public attention shunt of it 
from knowledge other sliping to view in our legislatures courts 
and departments of state (state or federal) expose or agent to 
that an undue arrogation of earning wealth, and spoil of avoca- 
tion and office; also influences of our endowed or subsidized 
professions and owned or boughten monthlies of sort now under 

204 



control of a deceiving deluding and extorting system of weath — 
of review and other-, see tools of this sophistry illustrated and 
paraded to view in culled characteristics of sort popularize of 
them with the uncritical, and suppress of that a secret purpose 
behind — (greatly a grist of barbered appointees legislators and 
executives of sort "passed down the line" as men of "sane" 
politics and understood usefulness — (otherwise secretly pushed 
into prominence or place for a purpose) : and of our newspaper 
minions to all this-, see this game of deception delusion and ex- 
tortion smudged out in a flushing din of all that tragical silly 
scandalous amusing abusive falsifying flattering etc fill in, sup- 
press cover over and distract of public attention (governed most- 
ly of prepared agitation and suppression deceptive) to this a 
most stupendous robbery (36 m) buried in a din of distracting 
noise @. Also see the principles of right and wrong (43*) 
flushed out in a gathering sweltering and never ending parade 
of importanizing statute technicality and decision. See also to 
this-, prepared ado and initiating or let-alone applause refresh 
hush up or lasso of sentiment sway or crowd (8 n n z), and an 
enthusiastic parade of new contentions, and suppress of old in- 
tentions conserve or advance all this or more: also Popery face 
of protestant countries, and a fussy importanizing attention of 
the press to sugar coated millionaires, and big handled digni- 
taries of sort playing in the game: — all to the contrary-, a sup- 
pression misrepresentation tirade thin out or gloss over — very 
obnoxious ones too heavy to carry longer occasionally thrown 
over to the sharks in a loudly virtuous indignation cover of the 
remainder. See further our newspaper people playing the same 
old game cover of themselves, and advertising patrons: also 
verbal representation or false show of things to misleading 
scheme inflation sale or barter. [All a parade of that deceiv- 
ingly liked, and a suppress or other of that naturally disliked. 
For the reverse of this-, see accusation and recrimination]. 



@ See this agitation of journalism a creation of an idly 
minded environment of news C[, and mould of a want thereto 
lieu of other that could be impressed and made as desirable at 
least, and much more useful if once created — (so of our opera 
and other amusements now greatly viciated of unnaturalness 
frivolousness * indecency and rascality) :— hence agitation of 
popular attention should be that a parade of things beneficial 
to intelligence and a rational or moral coMuct; suppression 
same-, an elimination (by law or busine ; ure) of all that 

205 * 



nonbeneficial or harmful to intelligence and a rational or moral 
conduct. [Public taste, not a creation of itself, but an impress 
of external influences — see our fads fashions customs beliefs 
and useful useless or harmful habits first an infection of environ- 
ment — conserving or slowly to quickly changing by those in so- 
ciety centrally agitating exampling suppressing and varying pub- 
lic opinions customs and habits diffusive: — acquisition of a like 
or want then, comes of a recipiency of that first an environing 
precedent; and innovation, that first an original conception (gen- 
ius of mind,- other imitative only) , and an influence directly or 
indirectly sufficient to its infective introduction beneficial useless 
or harmful to a part or all an infected society. See power of 
those agitated to public notice to deference and infection of 
others with newer or conserving notions their own or others — 
(see here approval of what all many or an authority (singular 
or plural) do or say, a justification of that a particular such in 
trade fashion and authoritative say so) : Also influence of 
iterate or impressive advertisement to scheme politics or trade 
on uncritical intelligence — 46*. See hero and authority agitation 
here muchly an iterate presentation of all that panegyric or 
cherished, and a suppression explain away or loss of all that 
derogatory faulty or contradictory. Again and obverse-, see per- 
sistent agitation or example of that disapproved with and with- 
out that connectingly approved and purposely paraded with it 
(16 A @@) wearing away to tolerating and unopposing indif- 
ference or quasi approval — (see of an Irish infected press here-, 
Romanism thus Jesuitically pushing itself into protestant coun- 
tries, and wane of party recrimination in old nearly worn out 
questions of factional dispute — new fuel needed to continued 
flame of factional hate, or old war hates of a past rekindled 
into flame) : and vice versa-, note persistent impress of that at 
first greatly appreciated wearing away to indifference or a 
monotonous dislike afterward]. 



<J Additional to this babel of tongue-, see books pamphlets 
and tracts of the cheap and trashy running into the millions: 
and master authors and adepts of knowledge revised annotated 
and substituted into obscurity by little men in big places: — see 
Websters Dictionaries revised, Crookers Boswell, most text books 
of the day, and other master authors and adepts of knowledge 
loaded to death with literary and other superfluous lingo of 
sort, and frivolora variations additions distinctions and substi- 
tutions of kind Apart or whatever way combined — hence of the 
multitude-, the Rasters and adepts of knowledge, are greatly 

r 206 



hidden away in the background of a crowd of small writers push- 
ing themselves into the vanguard of text book and other ephem- 
eral information *@. [History of our great authors, greatly an 
original or transmitted conglomeration of fact fabrication ex- 
aggeration depreciation omission and abstract generalization 
heterogeneously essential trivial left out extraneous and orna- 
mental of history — (a swamp of memory and waste mentality) : 
— Gibbon a socalled master historian (and the best we have of 
his subject), is more than one half a wilderness of hazy shifting 
glinting generalizations (real history ever particular in fact) of 
men and things, ornamenting loading down and leaving out a 
goodly mass of real Roman history — (omitted things, a minutia 
of facts more illustrative of Roman landscape agriculture manu- 
facture transportation merchandise domesticity professionalism, 
every day thought say and do) : a good historian, should picture 
out by a reconstruction of phenomena and thought of the day 
delineated (11 b) the mass of the people he describes in their 
real ways of life and thoughts then; and as far as practicable 
attendant of illustrations and exhibitions of them in their avo- 
cations amusements and other thing as near as possible like the 
original de describes — a finest subject for a true artists in- 
genuity right now @@. 

Ornamental and other superfluous writing and speech, as 
yet an ever recuring curse to economy of time and value of 
intelligence: — hence Gibbon is in error when he says "Dilligence 
and accuracy, are the only merits which a historical writer may 
ascribe to himself": a good common sense history of a real 
Roman people, is yet to be written, as that of all other nation- 
alities of people. 

* Our quite senseless and costly parades shows exhibitions 
etc if rightly amended and encouraged, could be made a source 
of incalculable benefit to intelligence (along with the more sen- 
sational to attract the idleminded) if once transformed in part 
at least into historical illustrations of the past and present,- 
with newspaper explanations previous, and short banner ex- 
planations present: — for instance-, the parade of an imitated 
Roman cohort (paraphernalia and all) and maneuver of camp 
and guard, march oratory applause of shields and battle with 
imitated Carthagenians (Hannibal or other) Bretons Barbar- 
ians or Persians, would do more to give the student of history 
an idea of the real Roman soldier and his surroundings enemy 
than a life time of reading otherwise necessary; and at the same 
time arouse a taste for the same in others that otherwise would 

207 



remain entirely ignorant of the greatest empire that has ever 
existed — (etc of hundreds of other subjects) : and varied by the 
ingenuity of our age-, Greek Roman Egyptian Babylonian Breton 
German and other landscape agriculture manufacture transpor- 
tation (caravan ox cart and other) merchandise home life dress 
worship profession etc, could be made quite a living reality — ■ 
for instance consecutively arranged wax figures (or paintings) 
and costume of men civilian priest official soldier mother daugh- 
ter aboriginal patriarch etc past to present, concomitant of do- 
mestic agricultural aboriginal patriarch and other implements 
houses lands streets temples villages cattle lots caravansaries etc 
peculiar to them, would form paintings museums villas campus 
and parks of inestimable value and entertaining information; 
also imitations of avocation government priestcraft worship 
funeral amusement etc, would form subjects often for the opera, 
and outside exhibitions without limit. [An imitated Roman tri- 
umph, would make one fine subject and substitute for our mostly 
foolish and tinseled parades of the day; a Greek procession or 
an Achillas and following of ancient time, or a caravan of arid 
lands would make other fine subjects of display: and to impress 
the memory and economize costs-, they could be repeated in 
variation, and the paraphernalia preserved and exchanged for 
other. In parades requiring many soldiers-, our local militia 
could be easily trained to the principle evolutions of most any 
soldier past to present; this with suitable uniforms arms etc, and 
sometimes coloring of the faces, would suffice to quite imitate 
an any army of men past to present.] 

@@ Also to a some genius of story and the truths of right 
and wrong in mind-, let him now delineate in fervent word tne 
concatenations (20 m, 22 **) of a think and do carrying all 
through it the concomitant results of a membership and society 
under the voluntary and enforced influences of a correct knowl- 
edge and right conduct, contrast a present selfishness and wrong 
of the stronger, versus the unassisted weaker purposely and care- 
lessly left in the toils of ignorance, triflingness, and a low 
power of coordination. [The voluntary here, a limited individual 
freedom of life property and use a best and most economic to 
the individual direct and others indirect of interest]. 

*@ The following, are a few illustrations of how much of 
this stuff is pushed off on an uncritical intelligence below. 

"Taking the book as a whole considering its spirit, its sim- 

208 



plicity clearness variety vigor comprehensiveness and hearty di- 
rectness-, we have no hesitancy in pronouncing it a great addi- 
tion to literature". [I ] 

"The admirable biography of the fairest specimens of Amer- 
ican character. The power of — — consisted mainly in his 
native forcableness and originality of character combined with 
remarkable proportion of active human sympathies. His sys- 
tematic nature was a deeply flowing straem of intellectual 
power; x x x he was an athlete of commanding energy, and 
illustrious performance" [ T — ] 

"A pretty readable novelette which is full of lightness, and 
which has a swiftness of movement that is like the froth of a 
champagne cup" [ — C — ] 

"The present volume, is no exception to Lord Tennysons 
mastery of his art. There is the same ringing rythm, the same 
strength of swing, and the same ease of variety that delighted 
our forefathers". [ — A — ] 

"The style is simple yet concise and elegant; the paper and 
binding good and durable; and the divisions and headings con- 
spicuous and prominent" [High School — ] 

Etc etc of whole avalanches of high horse lingo and soaring 
stupidity gulling a smattering multitude below. 



Appendix C. 

66 Of negative experience a blank to apprehensive (11 E <3i, 
65)-, exampled in a certain experience of Dicken's Oliver Twist: 
— "The boy had no friends to care for, or to care for him"; 
"the regret of no recent separations was in his mind," and "the 
absence of no loved and well remembered face sunk heavily into 
his heart" — contrast this with the willing wearing trifles of a 
mothers love and care summed up (11 A x) in the childs dearest 
remembrances of a mother in experience) : Of a blank in ex- 
perience to a no belief of hope-, "They chafed her breast x x x, 
thy talked to her of hope and comfort — they had been strangers 
too long": — see in this terrible tragedy of nature the preserva- 
tion of a mother's love die out in the swooning embrace of her 
dying kiss (chap' 1), and an "Olivers" orphanage — a tragedy of 
life hinged on a social ostracism no one should defend @, most 
can alleviate, and another made responsible — (43 <I) ; a tragedy 
of life initiated in a passion preservative of the human race, 
and nourished in a law of nature* that knows no marital rela- 
tion; a social ostracism the only possibility of an "Olivers" ex- 

209 



istence, and the whole concatenation of his depending and other 
contingencies. [& See further inability of savages to under- 
stand anything outside his savage experience as pictures or de- 
vices european,- by a no other term of sort to recognition — 
(11 A x) : also quite akin to this-, see the utter impossibility of 
factional hates in savage and semisavage men to understand 
anything good in an opposite faction (15 n n) ,- by their pre- 
possessed fiery notions of sort (no others there) the only repre- 
sentative of all they esteem ideally good — see in this the still 
lingering half savage elections of an Arkansas and Texas democ- 
racy, yet (1907) run with the "Rebel Yell" prepossessions t of 
a revengeful free-labor-crucifying-war of over forty years ago,- 
then and now quite only the ideal qualifications of men to praise 
place and honor there — 22 b*. See other prepossessions of sort 
world over, an ever persisting smothering darkness drown of all 
reason. Of paliated unpunished aching and insulting treason 
here-, see Constitution Grant Conkling Greeley and others Ap- 
pomattox and Reconstruction, and peonage legislation South, and 
its Reaction North — (11 a @ *) : Also that the since of it. Of 
aberrate prepossessions (65) world over-, see all crazes political 
religious medical hobby manners fashion etc, and all other 
delusions of sort authoritatively without a foundation in natural 
sense,- or reason — farmed out by the shrewd or cunning, and 
succored by ignorance prejudice and credulousness — 16 A || ft 
z See examples notions and do adult, and their riveting cere- 
monies feelings and repetitions in sort impressing themselves in 
the minds of the young and old to their any continuance and 
creeping or sly changes unobserved or sophisticated t to the un- 
critical — Hence English, continuing English, French, french, 
Oriental, oriental, Savages, savage, Sects, sect, Parties, party, 
and Southerners, "rebels" — a reaction now on in Texas 1907] 

@ To anyhow destroy the marital relations of parent and 
child, is to blot out the "kind faces" nestling trusts, respondent 
feelings, sacred hopes and centralizing alls of the family unit 
and its other friendships. [See this and The Cotters Saturday 
Night versus promiscuity rightly repelled as a lingering savag- 
ery festering in passion beer and vileness — 43 ft. And versus 
this a calloused indifference and snuffed out hope end the de- 
bauch of life-, see of the broken family circle the flame of sacred 
life still burning in the sorrowed heart and an immortalized 
hope of a life beyond. The family unit, a holiest and a most 
enjoyable centralization of the best emotions and collecting out- 
side do basis a best social union. 

210 



f See this sophistry a bloom of high place placarded "edu- 
cation of the people" in "Monometalism" (45) New York, and a 
subsidized and owned agitation recently press, and notorious 
salary fee and place corporate of call or secret influence a 
standing bribe to official literary and professional do or influ- 
ence sophistically useful to them. See also Railroad Banker and 
other ado and say sophistry agently politician and press and a 
Lumber Co, Coal Oil, and other official and professional sophis- 
try Texas and other: also a peeky-ado and seek and hide sophis- 
try (11 E IJ) aspirant of place influence or notoriety, and the 
"Commercial" and "Board of Trade" article and other a wily 
deflection of diffusions without, and a fatty aggregation of them 
within] . 

% An impetuous unreasoning and legalized planter blinded 
spirit that could coolly part a marriage bond slave, or empty 
a mothers cradle same ante a game of chance, adorn a manor 
soiree, feast a landlord bout, convert a heathen or plot a trea- 
son. See "rights" of the slaveholder really founded in aristo- 
cratic selfishness distracted to such ("elevated to a plane of 
reason") by a hair spliting sophistry interpret a fought over 
juggled and never defined ordinance clause of Federal Union. 
[See this aching spirit of Secession still flaming high in monu- 
mntal swarmeries of twenty-five thousand or more enthusiasts 
guardedly boasting and sinisterly perpetuating the crazed glory 
{Appendix E) , and exaggerated bravery of a Planters war and 
a fool-mans fight — a military delusion of the laboring classes 
south to crucify labor "on a cross of" slavery. [Negro daze 
North, an equality white; daze South, an equality horse — be- 
tween extremes-, ever lies the normal]. 



Appendix D. 

67 There is nothing within or about an alcoholic drink that 
has to it an any restoration of health, improvement of intelli- 
gence, nor betterment of behavior: but to the contrary-, such 
injures the delicate structures and functions of the body, dulls 
the respect of right in others, and aberrates the mind to saga- 
cious or virtuous conduct. In its relations of buyer and seller-, 
it takes from the buyer the earnings of a commodity in sort 
usually beneficial to life, and returns to him a commodity of 
kind (39 *) quite wholly injurious to life. Hence of calloused 
or ignored sensibility and wrecking will a disease result of in- 
toxicating drink or its seducing influences-, remedy nor critical 

211 



apprehension will scarcely come from those habituated solicited 
or jovialed to its use, but from those of a normal condition of 
mind heartily without it. Then alcoholic drink being an injury 
to body and mind-, no majority nor minority defending it can 
ever impress it a right in the developing and conserving laws of 
life — 43 $. Rights and wrongs to life then being founded only 
in things beneficial or harmful to body or mind in life-, no ma- 
jority king court or other can ever establish conserve or defend 
an intoxicating traffic on an any other principle than that an 
overlooked ignored or constrained injury to body or mind. So 
of all other commodities harmful to human existence. [See 
connection of alcoholic traffic to crime and politics wide about 
us — greatly licensed occupations and seducing influences of sort 
shield of them and screen or induct of robbery theft homicide 
animalism and rascality. Remedy a severe handling and an 
ostracise of such in all the decent walks of life. See "Ten Nights 
in a Bar Room", and an any illustrating detective work saloon 
of our cities, and drinking scandals and bouts of sort assault 
or homicide our courts: also critical peeps of sort bar our legis- 
lative capitols, and Tom Watson and A Voice in Congress 
"Where am /." Add to this the minutia of all indecencies a 
loosening of drink, and an untranslatable vileness of do and 
say]. 

Appendix E. 

68 "False notions of national honor and courage, as false 
and unholy as those of the duelist, do most towards fanning this 
fire of war. Great nations like great boys, place their honor in 
resisting insult and fighting well. One would think the time 
had gone by in which nations need rush to arms to prove they 
were not cowards. If there is one truth which history has 
taught, it is that communities of all stages of society have suf- 
ficient courage. Almost any man under the usual stimulants of 
camp can stand fire; and the poor wretch from the dram shop 
turned into the ranks soon fights like a hero, x x x Must blood 
forever flow to keep clean the escutcheon of a nations glory? 
For one I look upon war with a horror: I have long wanted 
patience to read of battles; were this world of my mind no 
man would fight for glory. For a commander who has no 
other claim to respect, seldom passes my lips, and the want of 
Sympathy, drives him from my mind. The thought of man 
Gods immortal child butchered by his brother; the thought of 
sea and land stained with human blood by human hands; of 
woman and children buried under the ruins of besieged cities, 

212 



and resources of empires and powers of all nature turned by 
malignity into engines of torture and destruction x x x, I shud- 
der as among demons". [Chaning] 

Appendix En. 

The following clip from a daily at hand (1896), is a woe- 
ful illustration of the mental condition of an immense multi- 
tude of human beings (greatly dangerous suffragists) as they 
now exist right under the blazing lights of a much paraded 
Nineteenth Century civilization: — 

A TRAVELER AMUSES HIMSELF AT THE EXPENSE OF A CROWD. 

"The ease with which the public can be gulled, was never 
shown to abetter advantage than last evening at the Union 
Depot, when a hundred or more people gathered around a long 
haired individual who had been pointed out as Francis Schlat- 
ter (the Denver Healer), and almost fought for an opportunity 
of taking his hand or having him fumble over their hankerchief s 
and mumble a few words over the fabric. That he was not the 
real healer never entered their minds: the fact that they were 
victims of a fake they will resent with scorn, and hug to their 
hearts the fond delusion unless they read this story of the joke. 
When Israel B. Putnam of Orange City Oregon left his home 
last Thursday morning to go to Marieta Ohio on a visit to his 
mother-, he never dreamed of the ovation he was to receive while 
he waited three hours at the Kansas City Union Depot. Put- 
nam wears long hair and has a meek and childlike expression 
on his face. Sunday while in Colorado-, he was told by several 
that he bore a remarkable resemblance to Schlatter; and yes- 
terday morning away out in Kansas-, a couple of traveling men 
again told him also of the resemblance. During the day when 
time hung heavy on their hands-, they told him they were going 
to start the rumor that he was Schlatter, and see what effect 
it would have: the newsboy carried the information, and soon 
passengers from every coach came crowding into Putnams car, 
and gathered about him; half a dozen recognized him they said 
from having seen his picture, or been in the procession of par- 
ties seeking healing at his hands (the supposed Schlatter) while 
he tarried at Denver — he was never asked whether he really was 
the healer, and seeing that the fake was a success, he allowed 
it to go on; the result was that he was beseiged the whole day 
for cure incantations of blessing. Last evening on his arrival-, 
the rumor was again started-, and soon a crowd gathered about 
him as he ate his lunch at the Union Depot: when he left the 

213 



counter-, he was literally surrounded, and from 6 till 9 o'clock 
(when he left)-, the crowd barred his progress no matter where 
he tried to go — they pulled at his arms, they fairly fought to 
get to him so as to touch him and have him touch their hand- 
kerchiefs. I am going to Ohio to rest for a time, and will be 
back here in two months-, he would reply when asked as to his 
journey: I am tired, don't ask me to do this: I dont want to 
etc-, he added as the crowd begged and besieged him to his 

departure. Passenger Director B was among the first to 

have his handkerchief blessed: — the long haired man, removed 
his hat, gazed at the ceiling, moved his lips, and then handed it 
back. J — H — , the fat policeman also had his blessed, after 
which he put it carefully in his inside pocket. Deputy United 

States Marshall and a prominent ticket broker on the 

Avenue, were also among the fortunate ones. Mrs. L — was 
in the depot going to Eureka Springs for relief of a broken leg, 
and the crowd demanded that Schlatter try his healing art on 
her: — he laid his hands on her head, raised his eyes in prayer 
for a moment, and then said "Have faith and be ye healed". As 
Putnam walked to his train-, he met a crowd of Railroad Offi- 
cials who paid him great deference: Vice President W — J — 
of the Rock Island, General Manager F — of Santa Fe, General 
Manager T — of the Missouri Pacific and half dozen others each 
in turn pressed the hand of the healer and bade him ado. He 
then took a seat in the Missouri Pacific for St. Louis; and as 
he sat there a Journal Reporter asked him who he was, and 
why the game was played; then dropping the sanctimonious 
air he had affected-, he said,- This is simply a fake to see what 
the people want and will believe of cure — (its a hard fake to 
work and keep serious) : did you see the people pull my arm, 
and the nervous ones hand me their handkerchiefs to be blessed? 
Wasn't that great foolishness in them? I have no more power 
than anyone else to heal, and yet a lady on the train told me 
that her throat was cured by simply winding her handkerchief 
about it after I had blessed it. I guess that Barnum was right 
when he said the people loved humbug,- for this is as big a one 
as I can well ocnceive. I am plain Israel B. Putnam and am 
going to Marieta, to visit my mother; and those traveling men 
put up this joke, and I am as much surprised as any one at the 
way it worked. Lord how people want to be cured ; and wouldn't 

214 



they be sore though if they knew the fake. That big Policeman-, 
did you see him how carefully he folded up that handkerchief 
and put it in his inside pocket? He will want to even up with 
me when he gets onto this won't he. [As the train pulled out, 
and the Reporter bade the healer ado-, Putnam added in a 
whisper "Don't say anything about it for awhile, and maybe 
some one may find himself really healed." After the train left-, 
the only topic of conversation at the depot and Union Avenue, 
was Schlatter and his work — for nearly all who saw him, be- 
lieved him to be the Healer of Denver] . 



69 See in our metropolitan press wily play of Romanism 
(here mostly Irish) incident their ever fawning dignifying 
defernces and popularizing notices of culled do and say of sort 
prestige an ever artful Pope of Rome, and iterate attentions 
flatter and push of Roman Catholic communicants and historic 
subjects or masters art into-prominence and helpful notoriety of 
sort prestige an ever persistent Church of Rome. [And behind 
all this a wile of show mass all centers of reflecting influence-, 
see museum subjects Catholic, imposing munificences cathedral, 
and pompous ceremonies worship an ever juggling daze of art 
do say and awe prestige an ever insinuating church of Rome @f. 
Rome of fact a pompous nightmare on intellectual progress, and 
a Jesuitical octopus on purposed ignorance — 33**. To this and 
all other depletions of material wealth or patronage-, see this 
unscrupulous journalism an adroit silence other than a purpos- 
itional or paid for defense or soft-soap of such agently filch of 
a friendly trusting patronage — a robbery of innocence by decep- 
tive influence]. 



@t Prestige here of fact-, a responding respect, or wearing 
indifference potential or unmolest of clerical importance, soft 
lining, and dignitary deference: consideration, a cheaply easy 
immaterial blessing respondent, heavenly delight deferred, or an 
interdictory interception of a conceptive penal prohibition priest- 
ly remunerative. [Lay end then, an elaborated remuneration 
deferredly and heavenly of the conceptive assumedly to be; 
priestly end, an excellency of tho earthy present, and deferred 
preference of the conceptive to be: — the conceptive, an elaborated 
enticing hope anchorage of the church and flock, and an ener- 
getically respondent and revenue bearing fear ending not at even 
death. 

316 



& Judaism in the American press a political stress elicit of 
a protecting sympathy or put up "thrift" distract a critical atten- 
tion to an old clanish heathenism ostracised to all natural sense 
of belief, and business honor — a bartered sympathy and con- 
doned freedom for a clan of race so steeped in fanaticism and 
moral turpitude as know no wrong a few can commit against a 
stranger not his race. [See Judiaism Contemporary Review 
1882-5, Invasion of the Cananites, and his shystering trade 
morals, and cahoot with others yet tolerated in political bribery 
and journalistic sycophancy. Metropolitan and Judaic morals, a 
couplet of legalized rascality called "thrift", and a devastate 
selfishness sear of all right and reason — (11 C x) : — See this on 
a grand scale in "Resumption Acts" Revolution and Rebellion, 
and monometalism world over before and sine — 45. Judaism, 
ever yet a gathering deepening parasitic graft on Christian 
protection. @. 



@ The practical importance of the question before the 
Secretary of Agriculture, was that there are thousands of men 
throughout the country engaged in the exceedingly profitable 
business of buying Peoria alcohol xxx, and letting it down with 
water one half its strength, coloring it, and flavoring it, and 
selling it at "twice the cost" and more. Every considerable 
town has several of these distileries and rectifiers who neither 
distill nor rectify, but drive a very lucrative business of trans- 
forming plain alcohol neutral spirits plain spirits silent spirits 
etc into whiskey. There are hundreds of millions of dollars 
invested in this business which is mostly in the hands of the 
Jews. Jews also own and control most of the output of the old 
fashioned pot distilleries, and the fierce battle now going on 
[about the pure food law,- 1907], is of two syndicate Jews: In 
every country-, the Jews take as naturally to the wholesale 
liquor business (ft) as they do to clothing and banking" [samely 
a spirit of skin deep and make it eat]," and in this way-, they 
revenge upon the Christians the wrong of their race." [A re- 
versal of justice. National Tribune April 18th, 1907. The rea- 
son there is little or nothing said against Catholicism or Juda- 
ism in the protestant press of our country, is patronage direct 
of subscription and advertisement within such, and a stock own- 
ership mortgage pressure, or clerical politico revenue bearing 
pull of wealth and income to them (a clique of patronage and 
exploment within^ and an exploitation of protestants without) 

216 



*l through a suppression of newspaper exposure. A knowledge 
of the lifting games secretly practiced, and open offences toler- 
ately tolled by these two organizations (akin), is an exhaust of 
every crime and rascality the caucasion race has invented: — 
cure for Romanism, a pressure of common sense intelligence lieu 
of Jesuitical despotism; cure for Judaism and other shystering 
deception in trade morals, is severe criminal prevention, or a 
scrape of them off of the face of the earth a supplementary 
measure to dodgeing persistence. [Refusal of the Jew to Zionize 
or colonize a clan to themselves (see Zangwell and the English 
Grant Africa), is absence on any opportunity to business prey 
on racial strangers: — Syrian Arabs arid African Nudities no 
charms for him — fat cities and fool Christians his paradise of 
opportunity]. 



Q Speaking of the Jews in the theatrical contest now on 
against Sunday theaters-, "I wish to be charitable to them, but 
I am determined to be plain. I find that the principle opposition 
to the enforcement of the Sunday laws comes from the Jews in 
the theatrical business. You will notice that the money and the 
sinews for defying and combating these Sunday laws comes 
from the Jews. You see no array of legal talent and no armed 
defience except from the Jews. The Jews control the theatrical 
syndicate, and are using their great chests of money to defy the 
law of a Christian nation. The theatrical trust of the Jews is 
grinding the actress actor and employee against a stone, and 
wringing money from them on Sunday. With these Jews-, it is 
merely a question of money, money and nothing else. They care 
not for a Sunday law or the right of the laborer to rest one day 
in the week." [Judge Wallace Criminal Court.] 



70 "Of the negro race South-, probably one fourth or near 
of these muchly filching idling beastly products of African 
savagery proslavery crime and philanthropic madness should 
thus be put to self sustaining servitude amend of themselves 
and restrain of others. Of planter hoggishness and not prin- 
ciple bottom of this crime of slavery screened to view-, see State 
Sovereignty paraded a great principle of rights free men catch 
of free labor assistance and justify of a principle of Secession 
(16 a @*) so adroitly guarded against in the Confederate Con- 
stitution — a great weal of well doing when pressed to a some 
cherished and infatuated selfishness of sort disunite a free state 

217 



union, and a silent danger to be guarded against in a slave state 
union. [Slavery crime here, a freebooting rabid hold-up* of a 
greatly more than a selfsustaining labor of a helpless human 
being — slave end to this in the cotton fields South, a weekly 
ration near to less a four cent peck of meal, three and one half 
pounds of two cent bacon, and a quite costless self produced 
vegetable addition; brogans a pair, and cotton bag clothing a 
one to three garments per year; log-cabin shelter, corn waste 
bedding, and what more he could snatch from vegetation, catch 
in the woods, steal from hounds, or filch from his master or 
his neighbors @ : — see pitted against this of its time, free labor 
a "white trash"; and akin to this-, see cruel use, brutal treat- 
ment, and insufficient nourishment return of much dumb service 
— a spirit same to much of this slavery. Planters end to this 
crime of slavery, the whole cotton and other profits of ten to 
fourteen hours of daily labor minus the slaves ration cotton bag 
clothing clapboard shelter swamp air miasm negro melody coon 
hunt past time etc essential and diversionary his proper place 
in the grand economics of a divinely ordained institution — whip- 
ping post culture, or his ears nailed to a plank, an impressive 
ceremony amend and restrain of his moral "ungratefulness." 
[Thirty Years South. See also inability of the many black and 
others to a free avocation other than meinal wage earner.] 

@ The authors evidence to this is the insulated testimony 
of surviving slaves, and a personal experience of over three years 
warfare in the cotton states South, and nearly one year of them 
a prisoner of war in the very heart of slavery — in this year of 
racking trial-, he substituted on a lower ration than the higher 
of this and learned it a very unsatisfying nourishment. During 
the war-, the Confederate private soldier, and the negro at home 
substituted on a ration about as that given the author,- and all 
know full well the craving aftermath of this very insufficient 
sustenance. This stealing from hounds, is entirely of slave tes- 
timony incidental of common conversation, and casual inquiry of 
direct question. If slavery was right-, then brutal or other 
impoverishment of human labor pamper a controlling few there- 
by, is a righteous do of do, and right and justice, an everlasting 
misnomer — so of our newer form of slavery,- a capitalized 
unionized officialized professionalized and journalized hold-up of 
unwitting and helpless people* [65]. 

218 



And now more than forty years have passed, and this iterate 
rabid impress of a planters influence on the southern heart (now 
hedged in hates of war) flames high in his politics (purposed 
greatly), and an infatuated desire to perpetuate this his holy 
righteous cause in monumental stone, and his children's prattle. 
Alive today : but the rising glimmer of a new light in a new 
man carving itself out of this his own element now moves 
quietly on the arena — a reaction for new things, and a quiet 
banishment of the old to an unwailed silence and a dust covered 
past of wrong made right and right made wrong: — hail light, 
hail reason; all hail the time when right shall rule and toil no 
longer pays unfeeling task masters a tribute of eternal wrong. 



* Harsh language critical of wrong in high quarters, is 
readily condemned by such as a very unbecoming coarseness in 
a writer of "sane" merit — they want to be handled if handled 
at all in a very high sounding and nicest manner possible to 
their very tender "cultures" of higher nature. The truth of 
this whole matter is-, the leaders of wealth and their dupes 
alike, are now all of them in so deep a sleep of high selfishness 
and low delusion as not to be influenced at all until thoroughly 
awakened by a some plainly stirring truthful blow straight into 
the very heart of their highly arrogant and lowly immolating 
prepossessions dearer to them than natural sense. [All this-, a 
denial of liberty to those that abuse it, and an affirm of it to 
all that rightly use it]. 



Master slave-, right be the bond, 
Wisdoms rule where no rule is found : (t) 
Master slave-, e'en be thy fate, 
White man's rule, the black man's hate: 
Master slave, all same the law; 
Monied Lord, the workman's flaw: (48*1) 
Master slave, all time shall be, 
Till God in man, shall make them free. [60.] 

S. B. T. 



91* 



SECTIONAL INDEX. 

Sec' 

Thing 1 

Form 2 

Quality 3 

Quantity 4 

Place 5 

Time 6 

Generals 7 

Particulars 8 

Comparison 9 

Demonstration 10 

Apprehension 11a 

Notion 11b 

Inference lie 

Emotion llo 

Name 12 

Description 13 

Definition 14 

Classification 15« 

Identification 18b 

Discrimination 15c 

Axioms of Sameness or likeness 16a 

Axioms of Difference 16b 

Axioms of Resemblance 16c 

Affections of Mind Correlative and Conservative of Force 17 

Cause 18, 19 

Effect 20 

Laws 21, 22 

Diagrams or Figures 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 

Gravitation Magnetism Adhesion Cohesion Integration and 

Disintegration 23 

Transmutation 24 

Isomerism 25 

Limits of Cause Movement and Equilibrium 26 

Transfer of Movement or Matter in Massive Molecular or 

Atomic Cause 27 

Sources of Force to Transfer etc 28 

The Solar System Indice of Natural Law and Solar Phe- 
nomena 29 

220 



Figures 6, 7, 8. 

Coordinates of Production, Production and Product in 

Weatlh 30, 31 

Wealth 32 

Production 33 

Consumption 34 

Cost 35 

Value 36 

Exchange 37 

Supply 38 

Demand 39 

Coordinations and Product a Tabled Variable 39a 

Monopoly in Wealth 40 

A Unit in Wealth 41 

Distribution 42 

Lawful and Unlawful Production 43 

Contract and Sale 44, 45 

Capital and Labor 46 

Deductive Conclusions 47 

Government 48 

Combination 49 

Individualism 50 

Liberty and Restraint, 51, 52 

Right and Duty 53, 54 

Corollaries 55, 56, 57 

Philosophy of Matter and Force 58, 59 

Natural Theology 60 

Language In, 61 

Punctuation 62 

Composition 63 

Appendix A 64 

Appendix B 65 

Appendix C 66 

Appendix D 67 

Appendix E 68 

Appendix F 69 

Appendix G 70 



221 




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